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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1919)
BRIEF , RIGHT REEZY BITS OF NEWS v AERO STOWAWAY IS DEMURE MISS. . Connellsville, Pa., Sept.' 27. Pret ty Miss Mabel Fishwick of Cincin nati stepped lightly from the pas senger, airplane piloted by Alfred Lawson of Washington, D. C, when high winds forced it to alight in a - cornfield here. . , - "This is my stowaway," grinned Pilot Lfiwson to reporters. The 'girl, who was visiting 'in Washington, decided she would like ,' to take the air, so she hid herself in the cabin and only revealed her presence when the ship was a mil or two above the earth. "They couldn't very well throw me out then," said she demurely. -The Lawson airplane will be in Omaha this week if present plans - 3o not miscarry. LUMEMBOURG women CAST FIRST VOTE TODAY. Lumcmbourg, Sept. 27. (By The Associated Press.) Opposing liberal leaders generally are of the opinion .;. that in the plebiscite throughout the ; grand duchy of Luxembourg the ma jority will favor the retention of the present dynasty headed by the Grand Duchess Charlotte. This will not only be the first ple biscite to be held since the war ' ended, but also the first election held ' on Sunday in Luxembourg, and the first iu which the women of Luxem bourg have been entitled to vote. RAISING LUSITANIA . UNDER CONSIDERATION. of raising the Lusitania is now under consideration by British financiers. Nayal experfs. after examination of the location of the sunken liner, have 'stated that it would be feasible to raise the vessel if the outlay should be considered worth while. The estimated cost has not been made public. MOTHER SELLS ONLY CHILD FOR $10,000. Newark, N. J., Sept. 27. Mrs. Evelyn G. Herbert, a widow, gave tin her child for $10,000, permitting 1 it to be adopted by its aunt and , jncle at the orphans', court. The child. Marietta, is 2'j years old. The mother told the court she was unable to support herself and her child on the annuity she was i receiving. Her husband, Harold Herbert, died last October, leaving his brother the bulk of his $100,000 estate, providing only an annuity of ?600 for his wife. I MORE FOR SUGAR PRESENT OUTLOOK. Chicago, Sept. 27. American housewives will be forced to pay IS cents a pound for sugar within a few weeks and 25 cents a pound by next spring, unless the United States sugar equalization board takes over the entire Cuban crop, Recording to members of the Amer ican Beet Sugar Manufacturers as ociation, in session here. To take over the Cuban crop J- it would be necessary for President VYilson to give the board authorisa tion for such action, as it would also be necessary to bring pressure to bear on the Cuban government to fix a maximum price and make t possible for this country to se cure the crop; Mr. Rolapp ex pressed doubt if - the president : would act. : - "As things; stand the United ''1 States must bid against the world for , nearly 2,500,000 tons of sugar, . Iialf of its yearly consumption," said Mr Rolapp. ' AMERICANS VERY SWIFT. . CARDINAL MERCIER SAYS. Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 27. "You . Americans are very swift," declared Cardinal Mercier to his escorts, as he was whirled about on a tour which included a visit to Independ ence Hall, where he looked upon the Liberty bell for the first time. He first visited the mayor's office in city hall, where he was greeted by Governor and Mrs. Sproul and Mayor and Mrs. Smith. From In dependence Halt the cardiaal was , driven through Fairmount park and thence to Overbrook seminary and Villa Nova college. Later he had luncheon at the University of Penn- DISCOVER BURIED ESKIMO VILLAGE. Nome, Alaska, Sept. 27. Dis covery of a buried Eskimo village, together with the frozen bodies of - 80 of jts ancient inhabitants, was made recently by W. B. Van Val- ' lin of the University of Pennsyl vania, who has arrived here on his way to the United States. He has , ben in the Barrow country for . nearly two years gathering relics of what is termed the "stone; age" of the natives of far northern Alaska. . . Bodies of several of the prehis toric Eskimos which, Van Vallin , said, differed in the shape of the head and in other particulars from present day Eskimos, have been shipped to the museum of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. . - Frm evidence gathered by Van f Vallin, it was believed, a catastrophe A had overtaken the ancient village. None of the present natives of the Barrow country knew of the exist ence of the village r ; FALLS TOO BUSY TO DIG ANY GRAVES. Cottonwood Falls. Kan; Sept. 27. People in this county are too busy to dig graves for their departed """friends. When the friends of Dick ' v Watchous, a farm laborer, endeav I. ored to find some one to dig a grave ,- at Clements they were unable to get mail. ' ' Came the day of the funeral and '" no'grave dug. Early that morning several friends of Watchous went to the cemetery and dug the grave. Some of them traveled 15 miles to perform the last rite for their friend. s COLLEGE FOOT BALL CENTER IS KILLED. Durham. N. H., Sept. 27. Gardner ? Dow of New Haven, center on the ronneciitMt Agricultural colleee foot , a11 t;ani. died from concussion of :'ie brim, received m the. ame with - 'ew Hampshire college. In the sec . r.nd half he tackled one of the New Hampshire men who was. running back for a punt and was rendered un conscious. He was also injured in - the stoma V OMAHA, THE GATE CITY OF THE WEST, OFFERS YOU GOLDEN OPPORTUNITIES. THE Omaha unday Bee VOL. - XLIX NO. 15. US? fl .VtSLT Sfti -m&g- lmivH OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 28, 1919. By Mill (I mrl, Dally. 15.00: Sunday, ?.:,0: Dally Ml Sua., JS.00; autilda Nak. awtaaa extra. five cents. THE WEATHER r Unsetlted and cooler Sun day and Monday; probably showers.' Hourly temperature; ' iv . a. in a, m II . m It noon m, . m. , m.. m.. .3 . (II . .M . .n .SB .... . ...tn .... ..,.7 .-..I . . Hi nil nn uuvi fi ISOLATION THREATENS GT. BRITAIN All Railway Traffic in King dom Stopped, Due to Strike of Two Greatest Railway Organizations. MINERS AND TRANSPORT WORKERS MAY GO OUT Expect Channel Steamers and Railway Boats Will Be Tied Up Effect on Business Al ready Proves Disastrous. London, Sept. 27. (By The Asso ciated Press.) The most far-reaching strike. Great Britain has ever ex perienced is in full operation today. Virtually all railway traffic in the kingdom has stopped. ' Local trans portation in London and other cities has been partially interrupted and complete suspension is threatened. Tw.'' great railway organizations, the Nat'onal Union of Railway Men and the Society of Engineers and Firemen, have stopped work. The Miners' and Transport Workers' union, the latter of which includes the dock workers, are expected to join them. , ' The English channel steamers and railway boats plying the Irish Sea probably will be tied UP, cutting off England's communication with the outer world to a large degree. The effect on business already is disastrous. Shops and offices every where are being operated with par tial forces Many miners had been unable to get .'-their ?wek" while the shortage of coatUnd of supplies promises tot cause the wholesale, shuttydown of lact-otie i. The svstiln 1 of food distribution and the mail service . are disorgan1 tzed, bat the government expects to have them in operation again with out much delay. ' ,:. ' - In view of the widespread effect of the movement leading newspapers iikc in limes declare mat u is more than a strike it is class work. Censure Government. Tonight a great mass meeting of railway men was held in Albert hall, at which James Henry Thomas, (Continued on I'mte Sis, Column One.) STEEL STRIKERS LINING UP FOR . HARDER BATTLE CALLS PRESIDENT WORLD'S MENACE AND PRO-GERMAN UNCLE SAklil 35.000 Employes of Bethlehem Company Ordered to Join the Walkout. (By The Associated Press.) Having failed in the first week of the steel strike to paralyze the industry, although crippling many plants and forcing a shutdown in some centers, union labor is massing its. forces for a greater offensive tomorrow, when approximately 35,- 000 employes of the Bethlehem company have been ordered to join the walkout. On the other hand officials of the United States Steel corporation and independent companies who claim to have won back many deserters, are preparing to launch a drive of their own, in an effort to reopen as many plants as possible and in crease the output in the mills kept in operation. The sixth day of the industrial struggle, which, passing without serious disorder, brought no great advantage , to either side, was marked by the following develop ments: 1 Formal announcement by the strikers national committee that the Bethlehem strike would become effective tomorrow. 2 Invitation extended by the strikers to the senate labor com mittee to visit Pittsburgh and in vestigate for iiself "causes of the strike" and "illegal and brutal methods employed by the steel cor portions to break the strike." . . 3 Announcement that the strik ers would confer with the railroad brotherhoods "on matters in con nection with the strike." . ; - 4 Expression of confidence in William Z. Foster, secretary of the strikers' national committee, adopt ed by that body after attacks had been made on Foster in congress and elsewhere for alleged "radical ism."' ' . '! . 5 Detailing of additional police in various cities to afford protection to workers desiring. to return to their posts tomorrow.. -j . 6 Reply by Secretary of War Ba ker to striker" protest that he lacked authority to prevent employ ment in Chicago of discharged sol diers in uniform as strike guards. 7 Second message sent Governor Cox of 0!io by Governor CornwelT of West. Virginia warning mm of a threatened "invasion" of West Vir ginia by Ohio strikers unless the Weirton mills close by tomorrow afternoon. , Senator Poindexter Flays Wi! son at Mass Meeting on Long Island.' New York, Sept. 27. President Wilson was characterized as "the world's greatest menace" in an ad dress by United States Senator Miles Poindexter, at a mass meet ing of Queens county republicans in Long Island City to celebrate the sixty-fifth anniversary of the found ing of the republican party.' The senator from Washington, after blaming the president for de lay in ratifying the peace treaty, said he Was "the greatest pro-German in the country," and that his theories and suggestions regarding the "democratization of industry" 'had encouraged radical labor lead ers to attempt to bring about "a dictatorship of - the proletariat" which means the "final overthrow of our republican form of govern ment." Referring to the president's im putation that certain opponents of the peace treaty and covenant were pro-Germans and bolshevists, Mr. Poindexter entered a vigorous dis claimer, declaring at the same time that the president "was forced into the war against the Germans by an irresistible public opinion in op position to his will and tried, as late as 1918, to precipitate a negotiated peace and thus defeat the aims of the allies." The '"reds of the world regard him as their leader," asserted Sena tor Poindexter. "His abuse of power in coming to the rescue of the dynamiter Mooney, in Califor nia, the murderer Hilstrom in Utah, the anarchist Robert Minor in France, and in attempting to set aside '"the processes of civil and military justice in the punishment of these criminals, has justified the anarchists and revolutionists in looking Upon him as their friend." UPHOLD JOHNSON FOR GREAT FIGHT AGAINST-TREATY GETS 8 BIG HUN IRS Allotted to America by Inter- Allied Shipping Commission During War, Now Becomes Property of U. S. IMPERAT0R LARGEST 1 AMONG THE VESSELS Telegrams Commending ... Him Received From "Big" Men in California. San Francisco, Sept. 27. Tele grams commending, his standing ion the peace treaty arid the league of nations covenant and , urging him to keep up a vigorous campaign for his demands concerning reserva tions,, were sent to United States Senator Hiram W. Johnson, here today by representatives of bank ing, labor and mercantile interests and the judiciary here today. Co incidentally a proclamation was is sued by Mayor James Rolph ask ing the citizens of San Francisco to welcome Senator Johnson and to "accord him the same attentive hearing that you gave to the presi dent." The telegrams were signed by Frank B. Anderson and I. W. Hell man and W. H. Crocker, bankers: H. McCarthy, president of the tate Building Trades council: Frank Devlin, railroad commission er; Meyer Lissner of Los Angeles, prominent progressive republican; United States Circuit Judge W. W. Morrow and a number of others. Judge Morrow, Anderson -and Crocker sent separate telegrams, but the remainder sent a joint mes sage. The telegrams followed a tele gram of protest sent to Senator Johnson by 38 prominent presidents of the bay region last Wednesday. Vincent Astor Sells Yacht With Great - War Record New York, Sept. 27. Vincent As tor has sold his yacht Noma, rep uted to be the fastest private yacht in the world, to Rodman Wana maker of New York; it "was learned here. - The purchase price was not announced. The Noma, recently returned to Mr. Astor from the naval auxiliary service, has a cold star and wa chevrons on her funnel, indicating! tnat sne destroyed a uerman subma rine and spent a year in active serv ice. The yacht is 262 feet long and has a net tonnage of 519 tons. The most noteworthy racing feat of the Noma was her decisive defeat of John Borden's Kanawha. 1 Austrians and German ' Arrested for Recruiting Vienna. Sept. 27. Two Austrians and a German have been arrested here because of their activities in a scheme to recruit men for unknown purposes. One hundred of their re cruits were also arrested. The recruits said they understood they were to join the. Hungarian white guards, the German territorial forces and the army of Admiral Kol chak, the anti-boshevik leader. Fokker Planes in Race. Washington, Sept. 27. Two Ger man Fokker planes are included in the list of entrants in the transcon tinental endurance flight between New York and San Francisco made public by the War department. Both will be piloted by army officers and start from New York, representing the office of the director of .the air i service. i Plans to Place Them in Pas senger and Freight Service ' Being Prepared by the Ship ping Board., Washington, Sept. 27. Eight Ger man liners including the former Hamburg-American steamer, Imper ator, second largest ship in the world, alloted to the United States by the Inter-allied shipping commis sion after the signing of the arm istice and used to bring home the American troops, are to be retain ed in the United States. Plans to place them in passenger and freight service are being prepared by the shipping board. ' The Imperator had been allocated by the allied naval commission at Paris to Great Britain and the Brit ish minister of shipping said that the ship would be delivered to him at Hoboken for use by the Cunard Line in service between New York and England. The dipping Board announced today, however, that it had taken the liner over from the war department and ordered a sur vey to determine repairs necessary lor use as a liner. , T. H. Rosseter. director oi.3Lhfe.diT vision of operations of the board, is sued tonigKt Jh following state- Imperator Redelivered. '.. "It is understood by, the United States shipping- board that the Im perator, Kaiserin Augusta Victoria and six other ex-German ships now in New York were allocated to the United States under the terms of peace and the board therefore as signed these vessels to the War de partment for the repatriation of troops. This service being now per formed, the chairman of the board requested the. War department to deliver the ships to the United States shipping board. . Accordingly the War department this morning redelivered the Imperator at New York to the shipping board repre sentatives." . While no official of the shipping board would stand sponsor for the statement, it was understood that the action of the board in retaining the ships was a direct result of a decision by the supreme economic council at Brussels to allocate to the allies 12 oil tank steamers in Ger man ports which the Standard Oil (Continued on Pro Six, Column Two.) : ; . I On Their Way! I 1895' -jL I - m - ! n PmrT- I OMAHA f i .11 .M -yA&KJA -i T.' : . .. rr . v - Tmmmm ran , . , , , , 111 STAGE SET FOR REIGN v. I 0FSAi His Majesty; King Ak-Sar-Ben XXV, Ruler.of the Realm of ' Quivera, Welcomes Faithful Subjects. ALL HIGHWAYSlEAD , TO OMAHA THIS WEEK City Ready to Play Host to Thousands of Visitors Who Will Come to Enjoy Six Days of Entertainment. Say Railroad Shopmen Reach Agreement With , Federal Administration Washington, Sept. 27. Repre sentatives of affiliated unions com prising. the railroad shopmen were reported to have reached a general understanding with the railroad ad ministration, covering .wages and working conditions to remain in ef fect while 'the" government controls the lines. Details were not available as the movement is still to be com- ALL DRAFTED MEN WILL BE H0MEBY END OF OCTOBER Adjt. Gen. Harris ' Makes Statement to House Military , Affairs Committee. Washington, Sept. 27. (By Uni versal Service.) All drafted men in the United States army will be-home by the end of October. This is the policy now being fol lowed by the administration, Adjut ant General Harris told the house military affairs ' committee. The statement was mada- in reply to a question by Representative Kearns, republican of Ohio, who asked what would be the result if President Wilson should withdraw the peace treaty from the senate. ' "The policy is to bring all the drafted men back," General Harris said. "By the end of October there will be no drafted men in Europe." Up to September 4, the commit tee was told, 4,378 men had been en listed for Siberian service aid be tween 2,000 andl.3,000 had sailed. This leavfes . but a few more than 2,000 meri yet to be replaced and brought home from, Siberia, General Harris explained. . Of the 37,211 men and 2,239 offi cers now in France and Germany, the adjutant general continued, less than one-third are with the army of occupation on the Rhine. The re mainder are engaged in cleaning up in France. . No troops are being sent to Sile sia, he stated. The Fifth and Fif tieth infantry regiments, reported to have been ordered to Silesia, he ex- pleted. it is said, but omciais ot tne vc urai uiucicu iu oncsid, i Am.ri, Qn Fprferatinn nf 1 .ahnr. fa- plained, are to go to Coblenz. miliar with the terms of the under-1 , General Harris declared he standing were quoted as describing thouSht ,s", dl" army of S09-000, :t as tiie most far-reaching and com prehensive agreement ever made by organized labor. Moic than 600,000 railway em ployes are included in the group of unions known as the railroad shop men. According to statements ob-' tained from various sources, the contenpla'.ed agreement iicludes a union wage scale for each trade or craft involved, the establishment of a basic eight-hour day, time1 and a half for overtime, and many other detailed provisions, all to be incor porated in uniform national con tracts which would terminate auto matically when the roads were handed back to private operation. Total Hurricane Death Toll ' Officially Placed at 345 Corpus Christi, Tex., Sept. 27. A revised summary of the casualties made public by the Bureau of In formation places the knownsdead in the vicinity of Corpus Christi as the result of the hurricane and tidal wave which swept over the South Texas gulf coast, Sunday, Sept. 14, at 320. Of this number, 157 were identified. The known dead in the vicinity of Rockport, Aransas Pass and Port Aransas, is officially given as 35, bringing the total death roll to 345. In Corpus 'Christi, alone, the list of persons still accounted for contains 275 names, making a grand total of 520 for the affected districts, including known dead and missing. , . men and 27,000 officers, as proposed by the War department, is, neces sary, but as an alternative he urged a force of '332,000 officers and men. Of this number, he said, an expedi tionary force of six infantry and one cavalry division should be main tained at minimum strength in the United States ready for service at any time. ' Available trained troops also should be kept at the training camps. ' The adjutant general's views with egard to the universal military training were slightly at variance with the recommendations of the general staff. He advocated a six months training period, with a pro vision that men given training in colleges and schools should not be required to serve more than three months in camps. Tries to Kill Self After An Argument With Wife Clarence Randall, 35 years old, 4758 North Twenty-fourth street, at tempted suicide about midnight last night by turning on the gas in his kitchen and closing himself in the room. 'Mrs. ' Leota Randall, his wife, noticed the smell of gas as she lay in bed and found her husband. Randall had a loaded revolver in his pocket when found. Mrs. Randall said differences be tween herself and her husband had probably prompted the attempt. Randall is out of danger, in the opin ion, of Dr. A. ji Edstrom, who at tended him,- . UniteA liege Most Flagrant Of All Profiteering Cases Landlord Strehlow Demands 25 Per Cent Increase from 105 Families, Giving Estimated Income Greater Than One of Big Office Buildings in City Deputy - County Attorney Rosenblum Says Cases Will Be Fought to Last Court. Occupants representing 105 families in the Roland, Ma jestic, Margaret and Strehlow apartments, Sherman avenue and Yates street, owned and controlled by1 R. Cfc Strehlow, have refused absolutely to agree to their rents being raised 25 per cent, and declare when their cases are presented in a court of justice an example of flagrant profiteering as bold as it is startling, will be developed. Tenants Make Probe. Tenants !in these apartments have made a thorough in vestigation and declare that Mr. Strehlow's returns from his four apartments, if he realizes his hopes, will amount to more than the receipts in rentals of one of the largest and most modern 15-story office buildings in the business section of the city. This isHrue despite the fact, it is alleged,Nthat the capi tal invested in the apartment houses will amount to about one-fourth as much as that n such an office structure. Fight to Last Court. The occupants of Mr, Strehlow's apartments have agreed to resist the profiteering demands of their land lord. They declare they , will take their cause to the courts of the last resort. The extortionate rents will not be paid, it was declared by Deputy County Attorney Arthur Rosen blum, a tenant, and every, action brought by the landlord for ejec tion will be fought to the bitter end. Several weeks ago Mr. Strehlow sent out notices to his tenants ad vising them of his purpose to raise their rents 25 per cent oyer the rates named in last year's leases. - With these notices, it is said, a threat was forwarded to the effect that, if the occupants did not ac cede to the arbitrary demands, exe cute and return promptly their leases for the ensuing year, $2 ad ditional a month would be added to their already. sky-high rent rates. Of the occupants of the 105 apart ments, it is estimated that less than 12 complied with this demand. Final Ejectment Notice. To those who refused to agree to the extortionate rates this final no tice was mailed yesterday: "You are hereby notified to leave, quit and deliver up to me the prem ises now occupied by(you. in the (Continued on Van Two, Column Two.) Bootleggers' Autos Run Gauntlet and Cross Omaha Bridge A squad of automobiles, thought to have been loaded with contra- Lband liquor, ra: the gauntlet of federal officers over the Douglas street ' bridge from Council Bluffs early Friday morning. A hail of bullets, fired by the officers, failed to stop any of the cars. One car stopped for a few seconds, then darted forward when a federal of ficer put his -gun to a front tire and fired. Sometime later, a car with two bullet holes in the rear of the body and a tire fot away was reported going through South Omaha. The federal agents were warned of the arrival of the cars from Kansas City. It is thought a lookout on this side of the bridge gave warn ing to -the agents, as a man ' ap proached the tollkceper at 2 o'clock and asked him what time the next Bluffs car would pass. An hour later, the alleged booze cars ' ran the bridge. Two Officers Killed One Mortally Hurt Aero Accident in Bronwsville, Tex., Sept. 27. Lieu tenant Colonel Leary, Fourth United States 'cavalry, and Lieutenant Hol lingsworth were instantly killed and Lieutenant -Connell, pilot of a bor der patrol airplane, was probably mortally injured near Rio Grande City, Tex., according' to a brief ra dio message received at Fort Brown. Details were not given. Grand Jury Soon to Indict "Big Five" Packer?, Belief Chicago, Sept. 27. The federal grand jurv which is investigating the "big five" packers is expectei to return indictments within 10 days for- violation of the Sherman anti trust laws, according to a report here today. It is said that the greater portion o' the evidence in tho hands of the government already has been pre sented to the jury . i - AK-SAR-BEN SCHEDULE . FOR THE WEEK. ' Con T. Kennedy shows at King's Highway. every day, 1 to 11 p. m. Electrical pageant of floats, "Famous Love Stories," Wednes day 8 p. m. , - Automobile Floral parade, Thursday, 2 p. m. Ak-Sar-Ben grand ball and coronation, Ak-Sar-Ben" Den, Friday, 8 p! m. Brandeis Theater Fisk O'Hara "Down Limerick Way." f Orpheum Suprtme vaudeville. Gayety "Roseland ' Girls" in burlesque. ' Boyd "She Walks in Her Sleep," farce comedy, until Wed nesday night; movies Thursday to Saturday. Empress Vaudeville and pic tures. Auditorium Thursday night, John Pesek and Jim Londos in tin,. , a - - T ' A Ak-Sai-Ben information bfiitu tair: 1410 Douglas 'streeir5fomf? theater. ? , Children's , day at t carnivaT grounds, Saturday, October 4, 1 to 6 p. m. --. X ATTENDANCE FIGURES. 1919. 1918. Wednesday . . . 6,316, 5,884 Thursday 9,715 7,567 Friday .'. 9,534 8,016 Saturday 16,058 20,501 A whole week of uninterrupted merriment lies ahead of all of the :; faithful subjects of the good King -Ak-Sar-Ben XXV, ruler of the realm of Quivera. Announcement yesterday that Maj.-Gen. Leonard Wood will honor Omaha with a brief visit Wednesday evening, and will review the electri cal parade, adds another item of im-T" portance to the 'program for the week. . - '' Come From All Points. Rain commenced falling early, cnoug'ri Saturday night to decrease the attendance considerably. . The total tendance for the year fell be low the total on the corresponding day of last year for the first time yesten'ay Mr. and Mrs. Omaha are prepar ing to serve as host and hostess during the week to thousands of vis itors who will' come here from man points within a radius of 100 mile; and more. - . With the King's Highway open al: week, the electrical pageant Wed nesday night, automobile paradt Thursday afternoon and the grand Ak-Sar-Ben. ball Friday evening. Old Man Gloom will be banished to some sequestered spot where he may have his grouch all by himself. . Tjhe gates of the city are ajar and everything is in readiness for six days of frolic that will begin Mon day afternoon, when the carnival gates will be opened at 1 o'clock. Electrical Parade Wednesday. The 25th annual, electrical parade will begin to move promptly at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, from Sixteenth and Cuming streets," and it will unfold itself like a beautiful vision of fairyland. Teeming with color and light, it will be passed iii review of admiring1 thousands along the line of routeThe theme of "Famous Love Stories," has, been worked out in a manner that is said to surpass the efforts of previous years. These stories have i been taken from mythology, drama, history and fiction, beginning with '' the romance in the Garden of Eden. Titles of the, floats in the elec trical pageant:. - - 1. Title float. "All the World ; Loves a Lover." 2. "Adam and Eve." ' 3. , "Pygmalion and Gala- ' tea." 4. "Helen of Troy." 5." "Venus and Adonis." 6. "Daphnis (Contlnnrd on Pite Srytn, Column- One.) Woman Arrested on Charge - ' v of Giving Away Liquor Mrs. Anna Zaksiz, 1422 South Thirteenth street, was arrested last night by Folice Sergeant Wheeler and Morris and Officers Trobv and Muldoon and charged with illegal possession of liquor and, with giving oway liqv.or. - Mrs. Zaksiz told Sergeant Wheel er she purchased alcohol delivered to her home for $10 per five-gallon jug. A gallon of alcohol and a small 2mourt of whisky were taken as cvr detice,' ' 9