T7 'f BRIEF RIGHT REEZY BITS OF NEWS GREAT AIR PILOT TO REMAIN "SKY PILOT." Mineola, Oct. 18. Although he is nailed as the greatest airman in America and one of the foremost pilots of the world, Lieutenant May nard. who left the Baptist ministry two years ago to enter the military service of his country, plans to ob tain his discharge from the army before Christmas and to re-enter the Wake Forest (N. C.) college, where he still has two years' work in his theological course. He is 27 years old. married. , and the father of two girls, aged 5 and 4 years. "FATTY" RESIGNS AS BASEBALL "MAGGOT". Los Angeles, Oct. 18. Roscoe Arbuckle announced Saturday he had resigned as president of the Vernon club of the Pacific Coast league. Arbuckle said he had ex pected to purchase the club, but had abandoned the plan because certain rights he had asked could not be granted. E. R. Maier, one of the owners, succeeded Arbuckle as president. OMAHA, THE GATE CITY OF THE WEST, OFFERS YkOU GOLDEN OPPORTUNITIES. The Omaha Sunday Bee VOL. XLIX NO. 18.-TST"ar"W'' OMAHA, -SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1919. ltf&J&JS&?g!l . FIVE CENTS. THE WEATHER i Rain and colder Sunday, fol lowed by generally fair Monday, with colder in east portion. Hourly tomperaturMt : B . m.. ...... ..45 a. m.. 44 I a. m .....43 8 P. m ,44 a. m ,...4 10 a. m .....4ft 11 a. m fit It noou ...68 1 p. n....,,v...8t t p. m.. ....... .81 8 p. m.. ....... .88 4 p. m .....84 6 p. in .....88 8 p. m......,...8S 1 P. m ....84 5 p m. PARSON IS WINNER IN AIR DERBY INDUSTRY PARALYZED ALL OVER EUROPE. New York, Oct. 18. "There is a paralysis of industry all over Eu rope. One exception is Belgium, but that is the only one." Frark A. Van derbilt told the American Manufac turers' Export association today. France and England, he said, were rapidly increasing their paper cur rency. Banking credits, he said, were inadequate to relieve the situation. "Then should be the creation of some security," he added, "that will CO to the investors of the country that wiil providfc the funds to get Europe back to work and unless that is done, the tragedy that Europe faces will be one that we will be in danger of having extended to us. Whatever it costs the civilization of Europe -must be saved." AUTHOR MARRIES SOCIETY WOMAN. Greenwich, Conn., pet. 18. Mrs. Beatrice Rogers Benjamin Pratt of New York and Newport was marJ ried Friday to Preston Gibson, au thor and playwright of Washington and New York. The marriage was performed by Judge Stephen S. Radford' of the probate court after Rev. Miner Howard of the Diamond Hill Methodist Episcopal church had declined to marry the couple because they had no marriage li cense. The necessary license was obtained from the town clerk before Judge Radford was asked to offi ciate. GRANDDAUGHTER OF H. H. ROGERS IN ELOPEMENT. New York, Oct. 18. Preston Gib son, a playwright, and Mrs. Beatrice Rogers Benjamin Pratt, divorced wife of Lieut. Alexander Dallas Bache Pratt and granddaughter of the late Henry H. Rogers, eloped in a taxicab today ana were mar ried at Greenwich, Conn. The elopement was said to have resulted from objections to the match on. the part of the bride' parents, Mr. and Mr. ' William Everett Benjamin. ZEPPELIN SOON TO CROSS ATLANTIC New York, Oct. 18. A 600-foot Zeppelin which was about to start .cross tin Atlantic to drop three tons of bombs on New York when the signing of the armistice ended the', war. will soon come to these shores on a peaceful mission under the command of American officers. Emil U Simon, a radiator engi neer, who arrived today on the Adri atic, brought the story of the air monster. "This machine," he said, "is the largest of the kind ever built. It is the only one built for war pur poses that was not destroyed by the Germans It is in a shed at Spandau.' WONT ENTERTAIN BELGIAN ROYALTX AT WHITE HOUSE. Washington, Oct. 18. Owing to the illness of President Wilson. King Albert and Queen Elizabeth of Belgium, and their son, will not be entertained at the White House dur inging their stay in Washington from October 27 to 30. They will be the gueits instead of the Vice Presi dent and Mrs. Marshall. King Albert will be received by the senate and house October 28. Leaving Washington October 30 the party wiil proceed either to New York .r Newport News to embark tor home Whi's in Washington the visitors will occupy the home of Assistant Secretary Breckenridge Long of the State department, which has been placed at their disposal. ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL GLAND. OPERATION. San Francisco, Oct. 18. (By Uni versal Service.) The 10th success ful operation in gland transplanta tion to. be performed at San Quentin prison within a year took place fol lowing the execution of Thomas Bellon. The interstitial gland, re moved from the body of Bellon im mediately after he had been pro nounced dead, was transplanted to the body of a prisoner afflicted with premature age and a depleted phys ical condition. The operation was completed within an hour after Bel lon had been pronounced dead. As described by Dr. Kelker, the patient on whom the operation was performed was a man 60 years of age but appearing much older. He was much under weight and ap peared to be undernourished, having the appearance of a man compelled to oerform hard labor with insuf ficient food. For some time past his eyesight has been failing and his movements indicated extreme weak ness, while his mental condition was that of a man who had lost all in terest in life. This condition generally describes of all the orisoners who have been operated on at the prison, according to Dr. Kelker. in every previous ooeraton. he said, an immediate im provement had been noticeable, sometmes becoming evident within 24 hours after the performance of the operation. This improvement ha been manifested by a restora tion of fairing senses such as sight, hearing and appetite, and also a re viva! of interest in life and surround- inzs. indicating a pronounced im provement in the mental condition of the patient. Lieut. Maynard First to Com . plete Second and Final Lap of Transcontinental Flight in Which 62 Participated. WIFE AND CHILDREN OF MINISTER GREET HIM St Louis Increases Its Tax ' of Profiteer Landlords and Collects Share of Spoils Assessor Says Just Proportion of Increases Is Due City Over Five Millions Added to Values Already and More Than $132,000 Collected Rent Raises Justi fied Only by Added Improvements to Property. Seven Aviators or Observers Lose Lives in Flight and DozenSmash Machines and Fail to Finish Race. Chicago, Oct. 18. Lieut. B. W. Maynard today wonthe transconti nental airplane race today by land ing at Mineola at 1:55:05 on his re turn from San Francisco after an elapsed time of slightly more than 10 days, three ot which were spent in San Francisco under the rules and another being lost in repairing his machine at Cheyenne on the west ward trip, and at Wahoo, Neb., on the homeward Uight. Just how many hours of the six days' actual flying lie consumed in the air has not been calculated, but he was slightly under 50 hours for the 5,402 miles. Second m the race tonight, with an enforced delay over Sunday under the rules, was Cant. T. O. Donaldson, who today reached Buf falo on the second continental cross ing, 323 miles from the finish. Next in the contest was Lieut. E. H. Man zelman, at Rock Island, Hi., with 985 miles separating him from the goal at Mineola. 1 hird place in the pursuit ot Alay- nard's record was held jointly by Capt. Lowell H. Smith and Lieuten ant Queens, westbound, who reached Cheyenne tonight, 1,005 miles from their destination. They were closely followed by Lieut. E. Cj Kiel, first to reach the Atlantic from the Pacific, who flew to Sid ney, Neb., today, 1,098 miles from Sin Francisco. Pearson Sixth Man. Capt. Alex Pearson, who had been Lieutenant Maynard's nearest contender until he broke down at North Platte, Neb., 1,491 miles from New York, was still there tonight, sixth behind Maynard. He expected fto resume his flight eastward Mon day, alter installing tne maie oi me Martin bomber plane borrowed by the "flying parson" when he broke his crank shaft at Wahoo, Neb. Of the 11 flyers who have made the first crossing, only two others remain in the contest, Lieut. H. W. Sheridan, spending Sunday at Salt Lake City, 2,083 miles from New York, and Lieut. R. S. Worthington, westbound, at Buffalo, 2,348 miles from San Francisco. Twe.ity-nine Make First Lap. Of he 62 who started in the derby only 29 tnanagjd tp make the first lap of 2,701 miles, the rules provid ing that those who did not arrive be fore sundown today would be dis qualified. Capt Felix Steinle, the fifth man to reach San Francisco to day in a borrowed plane at 4 p. m., was the last aviator to get in under the time iimit. The only man to reach New York today 'was Lieut. Paul Richter. Of the other 33 starters, a dozen smashed their machines, causing the deaths of seven aviators or observ ers, while the rest were only able to get within striking distance of the first! objective too late to qualify. At least three of those completing the first lap will not start back. There were three wrecks today, but no one was hurt. Maj. A. H. Gilke son, trailer of the westbound con tingent, hit a ditch in landing at Rawlings. Lieut. D. B. Gish wrecked his plane on reaching San Francisco and Maj. Harry Abbey fell at Au burn, Cal , only 100 miles from the finish oi the first lp. Family Greet Hint First The first persons to greet him as he stepped from his machine were his v.;,"e and two little girls, who rushed across the field amid the frantic cheering of the hundreds of spectators v. ho were marshaled at a safe distance by special details of soldiers. The first words uttered by Lieu tenant Maynard when he put his foot on mother earth again, were a generous tribute to Sergt. W. E. Klein, his companion on the flight "Sergeant Klein deserves the greatest credit" said the lieutenant. "It is all up to the lieutenant" promptly . retorted the sergeant. "He is the greatest pilot on earth." Wife at the Plane. Between Lieutenant Maynard and his wife, however, it was not a ques tion of words. Mrs. Maynard was at the side of the airplane almost before it had come to rest, and her husband leaned from his seat and embraced her silently. His two lit tle girls were lifted up'one after the other to :kiss their triumphant father. -- . , " Lieutenant Maynard's second pub lic announcement following bis tribute to his companion in the great race was a signal proof that neither his courage nor nerve had been af fected by the gruelling test to which St. Louis, Oct. 18. (Special.) The assessment of residence prop erty, on which landlords have in creased rents during the period of complaints of profiteering, has been increased $5,650,000 to date and in creases will be levied on other prop erty of this class as it is reached during the assessment period which ends in December. Thus the landlords so far as sessed will contribute $132,775 of the increased rents they will col lect before December, 1920, to the city in the form of increased faxes. These are figures of a statement by Assessor Wollbrinck in response to an inquiry as to what progress the city had made in its effort to check rent profiteering. Increases Made. 1 The districts so far assessed and the increases 'made on the assess ment of dwelling, flats and apart ments rented within them follow: Delmar boulevard to Easton ave nue, from Taylor avenue west to the city limits, $2,300,000. South side of Delmar boulevard to Manchester avenue, west of Tay lor avenue, $1,000,000. Manchester avenue to Magnolia avenue, from Grand avenue west, $1,000,000. Easton avenue, north to Natural Bridge road, west of Taylor ave nue, $500,000. South of Tower Grove Park (Ar senal street) to Gravois avenue, from the Mississippi river' to the city limits, $850,000. i ' Value Belongs to City. In explaining the method em ployed. Assessor Wollbrinck made the following statement: "Where the landlord has increased the value of his property by im provements and has given more in value received to the tenant than heretofore, the landlord is wholly within his rights in increasing the rent and his taxes should not be changed. "Where there has been no phys ical improvement on the property and the increased rent was made possible by the pressure of increased population or the scarcity of build ings, then if the landlord increased the rent he is appropriating values he did not and could not create. That value was produced by the people collectively of the municipal ity of St. Louis. In that case it seemed wholly proper, right and fair that the property should be revalued and assessed accordingly, because the municipality is entitled to a just proportion of the increased revenue derived from the property. "District assessors have been working diligently since June 1, in each instance asking what rent is paid and whether there has been an advance. They have reported each Saturday, their information showing that increases in assessment are war ranted in nearly every case of in creased rents. "The assessors have used a basis of 10 to 1 in their assessment. If the annual rental is $1,200 a . year, the property assessment has been fixed as $12,000, with such modifica tions as the surroundings seem to justify, so that increased rents have become an important factor in the city's revenue from real estate taxes. This system has not been applied to business property." VEILED WOMAN AND MALE COMPANION ROB PEDESTRIAN save Victim Unconscious After Taking Coat and Purse. Mrs. Fern French, 29 years old, 1138 North Seventeenth street, was attacked at 6 last night at Forty sixth and California streets by . a heavily veiled woman and a man, knocked unconscious and robbed of $7.20. For half an hour she lay f onscious in a field nearby unnoti' 1. Dazed, the injured woman f ;'jn'd her way home after borrowing car fare from a woman pedestrian. John French, her husband," called the po lice. Mrs. French told the police she was securing names and addresses for the Omaha City Directory com pany when attacked. Woman Heavily Veiled. "I sat on the curbstone at Forty sixth and California streets to rest," Mrs. French said. "A woman, heavily veiled, with a fur wrapped about her throat and mouth, ap proached me. "The veiled woman said, 'Here she is,' and a man's voice answered, 'All right.' . 'Tri matt c!v1 n a (mm Kt-In 'and put his hand over my mouth, I remember the woman took my pocketbook and the two of them started to carry me away. I think he must have struck me on the head. I don't remember any more, and when I awoke, I think a half hour later, I had several big bumps on my head and a bad headache. Left in Field. "I was lying flat on my back in an open field. My plush coat had been taken off and was nowhere around. I stumbled along till I came to a street, and asked a woman there to give me some carfare. She put me on a street car. After that I must have gone into unconscious ness again, because when I awoke I was standing at Twentieth and Cuming streets. From there I was able to find my way home." Police surgeons who attended Mrs. French said she had deep scratches on her back and breast and several bumps behind her right ear. Mrs. French's pocketbook was gone when she awoke, and papers from it were scattered about where she lay. Miners' Strike Certain Unless Operators Yield Des" Moines, la., Oct 18. (Spe rial Telegram.) Representatives of miners' local unions in district 13, United Mine Workers of America, in session here today, declare that a strike November -1, is inevitable unless operators meet demands for increased wages and shorter work ing days. 1 . ' First installment of War ' -" Indemnity Paid by Huns Berlin, Oct. 18v The Cologne Ga zette says, it understands that Ger many has paid the first installment of the war indemnity. The news paper, says it consisted of deliveries of various commodities, amounting Ito 20,000,000,000 marks. nnnnnm lmj umj u UYJ r1 TWtf Here Is First Telegraphed Picture, Which Will Be' Exclusive Bee Feature fA i ' ?W-'f! : ' ' r ' "Mike" Gilhooley, champion stowaway, guest at a New York hotel. SAY OPERATION WONT" BE NEEDED TO CURE WILSON President Spends Comfortable Day, According to His ' Physicians. 1 s Washington, Oct. 18. President Wilson passed the best day he has known since his present illness be gan, Rear Admiral Cary T. Gray son, his physician, said Saturday night. No operation will be neces sary to relieve the swelling of the prostate gland, which has compli- j cated the case and the president is making slow but satisfactory prog ress toward recovery from his ner vous exhaustion. The decision that no operation was necessary was made by Dr. Young, the Baltimore specialist. This, was the conclusion reached by the six attending physicians af ter a consultation which lasted more than an hour and a half. Their op timistic views were reflected in the following bulletin, issued at 10 p. m.: The president had a comfortable day. He has been taking abundant nourishment and is somewhat stronger. The improvement in the prostatic condition has been main tained very satisfactorily and no change in the simple treatment em ployed in contemplated.. (Signed.) Grayson, Dercum, Young, Fowler, Ruff in and Stitt." Test of Invention Here Proves Pictures by Wire Is No Longer Idle Dream Photograph of Lad Taken in New. York Hotel is Repro duced in Omaha Only Few Hours Later Watch ' Bee for Other Pictures. ' " ' The first of the telegraphic pic tures to be published by The Bee, as shown above, while exhibiting a lack of finish to be found in photos taken direct from the camera plate, is still an excellent photograph and shows the wonderful possibilities for the future. In addition, and pending the improvements which the experience of the past, with all inventions indicates, is certain to follow, the fact of the timeliness of the graphic representation makes up for any faults that might be pointed out. This picture was taken Saturday afternoon in New York and imme diately forwarded to The Bee by the wonderful telegraphic process. Master Mike Gilhooley gained fame through his insistence upon being admitted to the United States. He was a Belgian war orphan, adopted by an American regiment during the progress of the fighting and at the end of hostilities stowed away on a ship bound for the land of his adopted parents, the members of the regiment. On landing at El- SMASHED ALL RECORDS During the week of October ; 12th to 18th, inclusive The Omaha Bee ...published the... GREATEST VOLUME OF REGULAR ADVERTISING ever published in any single week in its history And, TOO ---Owr 1000 New " Readers Subscribed to the BEE "The BEE Prints All the News Without FEAR or FAVOR" 0 lis island he was immediately re shipped to the old country, but came back again. This was repeat ed five times, until national atten tion was attracted to his exploits, and then offers of adoption began to pour in upon the emigration offi cials. A woman in Milwaukee made a bid for him, but was a little late, as Mrs. Marian Gilhooley Curry, a wealthy woman of New York, has already made a claim, and posses sion of ihe boy had been delivered to her vending formal arrangements. Mrs. Curry had been attracted to the boy, not only because of his per sistence, courage and daring, but be cause his was her maiden name, Gil hooley. She installed him in her apartments at the Vanderbilt hotel in New York City, and the young stowaway began to live the life of a modern Aladdin. The above picture will be followed by others, to be published in The Bee whenever events of importance transpire that are worth photo graphic reproduction, and where the enterprise of the newspaper dictates that the picture should be placed be fore its readers immediately without waiting for the slow transmission of the mails. Watch The Bee for other pic tures. j Coflective Bargaining Agreement Reached by Industrial Conference Washingon, Oct. 18. A tentative agreement on collective bargaining was reached by the general commit tee of the national industrial confer ence after an all-day session. Com mittee members will consult with their respective groups Sunday and final action on framing a report to the conference will be taken by the general committee tomorrow night. The committee agreement was reached by taking the declaration of the public and labor groups as a basis and adding to the sentence recognizing the right of wage ear ners to organize "in trade and labor unions" the words "shop and other industrial associations." The proposed compromise' also substitutes for the sentence of the original declaration recognizing the right of organized labor to be. rep resented "by representatives of their own choosing" the words "by representatives chosen by a major ity of their own members." D. S. C. for Brave Deeds. Washington, Oct 18. Retroactive awards ' of Distinguished Service crosses were announced by the War department to Maj. Gen. C. D. Rhodes. Col. Henry H. Sheen and Majors A. M. Ferguson, Edward L. King and Charles F. Humphrey, jr. Their citations were for acts of hero ism in the Philippines in 1898 and 1900 INTEREST HERE IN GRAND OPERA r AT HIGH PITCH Rush for Seat Reservations Causes Maintenance of Open Box Office All Day Sunday. Opera is a gigantic undertaking. Nobody knows this better than those who are in charge of the Chi cago Grand Opera company's two gorgeous productions, "Aida" and "The Masked Ball." , . To be sure that the electricity was working, that all lights were in their proper place, that the wings and dressing rooms were all in readiness to receive the singers Monday and Tuesday nights, the management sent an engineer to Omaha three days in advance of the company. With him were 2.700 pounds of tope, colored electric light bulbs, trappings, trimmings and fittings of 'all kinds. The scenery is to be exactly the same as is used in Chi cago and the productions are guar anteed by Campinini to be 100 per cent perfect, if such a thing is pos sible. Self Tickets Sunday. Mrs. Florence E. Whiteside, who has been in Omaha six weeks pre paring the city and the company for their musical fete, announced Sat urday that the box office would be open all day Sunday to accommo date the crowds who are anxious to purchase tickets. "It was with some difficulty," said Mrs. Whiteside, "that we found some one to hold this ticket post at the Auditorium during Sunday, but we finally succeeded. Reservations are coming in so rapidly that it would be impossible to handle the sales, with any degree of accuracy or ease, without the Sunday 'open box office.' " Added interest is being shown in the Monday night performance, "Aida," because of the eight beau tiful giris who will super in . the great triumphal scene. They are Misses Ruth Bieber, Elsie and Frieda Paustain, Adelyn Wood, Ger trude and Ellen Anthes and Mrs. Walter Don Cameron, pupils of Miss Mary Munchhoff. Omaha Becoming Metropolitan.. From the Glee club and some of the leading Omaha choirs there will be 75 men taking part in the same scene. The "Masked Ball" is very differ ent in theme and music, and Emmy Destinn, whose marvelous voice is one of Ihe brightest spots in the Metropolitan opera this year, is a rare treat. She is one of the world's notables and has stirred great in terest not only with her voice but her personal career. j She was held prisoner in her home for three years, in Austria, as a spy. ! And Mine. Destinn declares she would certainly have taken all the information possible to her people, the Czecho-Slavics. In fact she says that on several occasions she was able to pass word to them. With the coming of grand opera, Omaha, it is declared, takes one; long leap toward a metropolitan I city. I OLSIVI B CAN'T HOLD FORT L ONG One Dispatch Announces Yu denitch's Cavalry Already Is in Capital, But This Report Lacks Confirmation. DENIKIIME IN SOUTH PURSUES SUCCESSES Bolshevik Minister of War Says "Pack of Bourgeois durs Is Worrying Body of So viet Russia on All Sides." London, Oct. 18. (By The Associ ated Press.) Petrograd tonight was so closely invested by the anti-bolshevik forces, according to the latest official advices, that military experts expressed the belief that little short of a miracle could save the hard pressed bolsheviki. Indeed, "one newspaper dispatch reported General ' Yudenitch's cavalry in the capital. But there is no confirmation of this. Neither had British official con firmation been received of the re ported surrender of Kronstadt, al though the war office states that the Esthonians on Friday, operating in conjunction with Yudenitch, got within four miles of the Krasnia Gorka, facing Kronstadt. Thus Kronstadt would be in a dangerous position as, with the capture of Pe trograd, it would be cut off. Coinci dent with these reports comes an an nouncement by Leon Trotzky, the bolshevik war minister, referring to the anti-bolshevik forces as "a pack of bourgeois curs worrying the body of soviet Russia" and declaring that Petrograd will not fall. . ' In the meantime in the south, General Denikine has been pursuing his successes. But he is meeting with strenuous resistance in the Orel region, where the fiercest fighting is going on. Say Petrograd Entered. Further reports from Scandinavian sources that Petrograd had been en tered by forces of the Russian north western army were -received this af ternoon. The Skanska Dagbladet of Stockholm, according to a message from the Swedish capital, reported that the cavalry of that army had reached Petrograd. A bolshevik wireless communique claims the capture of Fastov, a rail way junction 40 miles southwest of Kiev, on the road to Odessa. An earlier bolshevist announce ment reported that Kiev itself was captured Wednesday by an impet-. uous surprise attack; General Den ikine has not reported the loss of this town, one of the most im portant in southern Russia. Curs Worrying Russia. The following description of the situation in the Baltic is attributed to Leon Trotsky, the bolshevik min ister of war, by a wireless message from Moscow: "A pack of bourgeois curs are worrying the body of soviet Russia on all sides. Polish knights are"1 gnashing their teeth. The German consul, von der Goltz, under in structions by the stock exchange and the offscourings of all lands, is seizing the Baltic country with the (Contlnnd on rata Four, Column Five.) Omaha Girl Seeks Heavy Damages for Ejection From Hotel Los Angeles, Cal., Oct 18. (Spe cial Telegram.) How many good round dollars should a girl be given for injury to her reputation in be ing ejected from a hotel when the management believed her presence was undesirable? Pretty Miss Irene Anna Stecher of Omaha says not a cent less than $10,000. and she has '.filed suit' against the Hotel Clark for that sum, but 'Miss Stecher says her injuries amount to more than a mere char acter damage. Her sufferings, as outlined in the complaint filed by Attorney Lester W. Roth in the ' United States district court, are: "Hurt in character and reputation. "Injury to nervous system. "Humiliation and disgrace. . . ; "Shock and sickness. : ' ' "Great pain and chagrin. "Mortification and aneuish of hnti and mind." Miss Stecher claims that she left Omaha,' where she resides with her " mother, July 12 for a trip through' the Canadian Rockies and down th coast. An old friend of the family was visiting in Los Angeles and they met He was the only friend she had " in me city. Miss btecher claimsand occasionally visited her at the hotel. He was present on the evening of September 22 about 6 o'clock. Miss Stecher alleges, when she wii tuft ed. She charges the employes of the noiei aaaressea ner in "vile and abu sive language, falsely and unjustly accusing her of being a disreputable person and of conduct imputing guilt of impropriety and immoral- : lty. V.v -it t 4 i v.-