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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1923)
Fred A. Wright, Omaha Attorney, Heads Bar Body J North Platte, Wayne and Te cumseh Lawyers Vice Pres idents—Speaker Warns of Reformers. Btncoln, Dec. 29.—Fred A. Wright of Omaha will head the Nebraska Bar association during the coming year, having been elected president this aft ernoon at a business session of the or ganization. which is in convention here. Vice presidents elected today in clude: Robert II. Beatty, North I’latte: Fred S. Berry, Wayne; and E. S. Westwood, Tecumseh. Anan Ray mond, Omaha, will be secretary and Virgin Haggart, Omaha, treasurer. Barkers of a measure which would introduce a. bill into the coming legis lature to bar attorneys outside tho state from appearing before Nebraska courts unless accompanied by a Ne braska attorney as an associate, were forced to accept a compromise to day when the association voted to leave the matter to the state su preme court. Blocs Run Country. “Efforts on the part of blocs, sects end “movements” of various sorts to Impose their ideas and practices upon the rest of mankind have result ed in America in a state of “paternal ism run mad,” according to Robert E. l,ee Saner, president of the Ameri can Bar association. In an address this noon before the convention. “We are no longer a united, homo geneous people; we no longer legislate and plan for the welfare and benefit of the American people as a whole nation,” he declared. "We are now confronted by blocs, which mean nothing more or less than a sinister kindling of the flames of class consciousness, and an attempt tiy ambitious and weasel-minded dema gogues to divide the eitizens of this nation against tlftmseives." Defends Slates' Rights. Mr. Saner exhorted his hearers not to remove the landmarks set by their fathers, and set forth as exhibit A the chief landmark, the constitution of the United States. He deplored a universal tendency to amend the constitution “like a laundry ticket” and the gradual encroachment by the federal government on the power of lhe states. "Not only is constitution tinkering •the leading outdoor sport with the typical politician of today, but hand in hand with it goes the steadily in creasing encroachment of the fed eral government on the rights of the commonwealths and the individuals who are citizens of these common wealths,” he said. “The states are dwarfed and the nation magnified, and all to govern a people who can best govern thoai •selves. "The age through which we are now going may well l,e termed the age of constitutional amendments and federal encroachment. This is the age of the moral and political Diliputlans and the land of Liliput, Instead of producing Gull vers, shackles them by ihe overwhelming numbers of Its me diocrity and mendacity.” Times Have Changed. Referring to the men who framed the constitution. .Mr.' Saner asserted l hat It would lie impossible In this day ,,to assemble their like again. “In this statement I am not enter ing into a discussion of the funda mental ability of the fathers as com pared to our present statesmen and near statesmen," he explained. ‘ I mean that It would he impossible under the present dispensation to elect them to a constitutional con vention. Mr. Wayne B. Wheelrr of the Anti Saloon league would immediately send out a questionnaire asking George Washington and John Mar shall if they ever in all their lives took a drink, and Dr. Harry Bowlby of the Blue Sunday league would in terrogate Benjamin Franklin as to whether he ever flew his kite on Sunday In Philadelphia.” Eairbury Conductor Is Nabbed on Liquor Charge Beatrice, Neb., Dec. 2t>. — State agents today arrested Robert Poole, 55, t’airbury. Neb., for 20 years con ductor on the Fuirhury-Horton branch of the Rock Island, on the charge of having liquor in his possession. When i he officers searched the w-ny car in the Rock Island yards here they found a gallon of liquor in Poole's locker. Poole, Sheriff Sailing says, will he held in jail here until Monday. Mrs. Poole, who came here to see her hus band, was questioned Icy the officers ■She returned home tills evening. Former Tecumseh Uirl ami Kansan Are Wed in Chicago Tecumseh, Neb., Dec. 23.—MIhh Blanche Buerstetta, daughter of Mrs. Kfta Buerstetta of Portland, Ore., reared here and formerly of Lincoln, and Addison I. Doling of Topeka, Kan., were married In Chicago. Miss Buerstctta, an accomplished musician, has been doing special work in Chicago for two years. She Is a graduate of th^ Tecumseh High school and both the bride and bridegroom are graduates of the Nebraska State uni versity. Mr. and Mrs. Doling will be ' at home to their friends in Topeka after January 15. American Missionary Freed. Pakln, Die. 29. K. W. Behtnalzreld, an American missionary attached to ilie Reformed Church In the United States, who wn« kidnaped hv bandits Inst November, was released on l)e ■ ember 20, according to advices re ceived here from Clhangsha, Hunan province. No details were given. Mr. Kchmalsreid, whose mission ts at Shenehow Fu, Hunan, was seized while ho was on hi" way from t'hangteh, Hunan, to Tungjen, Kwel 1 how. Four women who were accom panying him tit the time were pci mltted to resume their Journey. Infant Daughter Dies. Colletta A. Stewart, Infant da ugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Stewart, 2 438 Pj-own street, died Saturday at her home. Mr. Stewart is claim agent for the atreet, railway company. Funeral services will he held Sun day Afternoon nt 2 at the Henfey A Henf-v chapel. Burlil will lto 1» Fotf_t I .awn cemetery. December Coasting and Skating Replaced by “Mies” Instead of skates, sleds and skiis that are usually brought out in the month of Oeceniber in Omaha, the mild weather has brought forth roller skates and marbles. Here is a group of boys in the neighborhood of Twenty-eighth street and Oaurel avenue, who are practicing at shooting “migs."_.___ Farmer Hit bv j Rum Car Dying Pathfinder of Runners Strikes Aged Minnesota Man— Driver Also Hurt. Minneapolis, Minn., Dec. 29.— Charles Dam, farmer of Watab, Minn., run down by a fla-shy road ster, pathfinder for a fast whisky runners’ caravan from Canada, is at the point of death today at St. Raphaels hospital, St. Cloud, Minn., while police of the Twin Cities and sheriffs of several counties, in pos session of the numbers of the cars of the bootleggers, one of whom is ser iously injured, are combing the coun try and expect to make several ar rests soon. Dam, an elderly man, was driving home last night to his farm six miles north of St. Cloud on the paved Jef ferson highway, w'hen the expensive loadster struck him, instantly killing one of his horses, injuring the other, and hurling Dam 30 feet, fractur ing his skull, ribs and right arm. Almost simultaneously with the crash, the second car of the runners' caravan, carrying five or six men, pulled up, extricated the driver of the first car, who was badly injured. His car, full of whisky, had gone into the ditch and overturned on him. The second car drove away with him, leaving Dam bleeding and dying. Coolidge Wins Alabama Fight By Associated Frr**. Birmingham, Ala., Dec. 29.—Ala bama republicans will not enter the Alabama presidential primary, it was decided here today at a meeting of the state republienn executive com mittee, but will elect delegates In state convention Tuesday, May 20, 1924. This, it was said, is a victory for the forces supporting President Coolidge. The vote came on motion by C. B. Kenna, United States district attorney of the northern district, of Birming ham, as a substitute to one by Judge C. It. Lunsford of Marion to go into the primary and to so notify the na tional committee. The vote on Kenna s motion was 37 to 2. $100,000,000 for Pictures in 1924 T.os Angeles. Dec. 29.—Upwards of $100,000,000 will be spent In the mak ing of motion pictures In southern California during the coming year, according to lilm company officials her<\ Warner brothers' Hollywood studio, which recently suspended operations, yesterday announced that production would tie resumed Jan uary 7 In pursuance of a 1924 pro gram calling for expenditures of more than IB.000.000, and other producing organizations made public their plans for what they predicted would be a year of record activity. Joseph II. Schenck announced a $1.000,000 program for the new year. Woman Would Be Mayor of Seattle Seattle, Doc. 2ft.—Mrs. Knthoryn Miracle today filed her candidacy for ; mayor of Seattle. Before she was elected to ti^c city council two years pro with Mrs. Henry I„amle« no I woman had belonged to that body. Rodaevelts Reach Coast. San Francisco, Dec. 29.— Mrs. Roosevelt, widow of the late Theo dore Roosevelt, and her son, Capt. Kermit Roosevelt, arrived here yester day from the east and will board the liner President Lincoln today for the orient. BEATRICE—Five hoys, three of whom are high school students nt Fil* ley, were fined $5 each for ytealing candy from Filley High school girls. They were also required to subscribe $3.00 among themselves to pay for the stolen sweets. Wife Says Mate Tried to Sell Her I/a Hale H'i"j X Jc le n I/a Mate » /**« The entire country has been aroused by ttie charge of Mrs. Helen I,a Male, who alleged in (lie Ia>s Angeles divorce courts that her husband, KIsier I.a Maie, Hollywood motion picture director, had tried to sell her to Ix>u Harris, an immensely wealthy negro gaMibler at Tia Juana, Mexico for $500,000, of which, she alleges, she was to receive $150,000 if she permitted herself to be sold. 1.1 Maie denies tile charges. “Between the Devil Lasky Laments Suit Over ‘Covered If agon -i I,os Angeles, Cal., Dec. 29.—The million dollar damage suit filed In Kansas City yesterday ngainst the Famous Playors-Lasky corporation and based on 'fully Marshalls por trayal of ‘'J;m Bridger,” in the film "The Covered Wagon, ' has thrown the motion picture producers into a bog located somewhere "between the devil and the deep blue sea.” accord ing to a statement issued by Jesse L. Lasky, president of the corporation. Iteferrlug to the allegation of Mrs. Bridger Hahn, that the name of the scout, her father, had been disgraced by the film delineation of his charac ter, Lasky said: "If the producer fails to handle the author’s story exactly as it is writ ten, he faces legal action from the uuthor. If he follows closely, as in this case, it now develops that ho also is open to legal action. The producer is between the devil and the deep blue sea." The “Jim Bridget" of the film. Tul ly Marshall, went farther than the producers. "I Immortalized Bridger," said Marshall. "The old scout's dnughter should give thanks for the preservation of the family name." Bishop Criticizes U. S. Prohibition Uv \*wk hiti'il Press. Plymouth, Her. 29.—The Kev. laud William <Juscoyne-('eeil. bishop of Exeter, in a pastoral letter says America lias antlpathiz* d men of moderate opinion, and there seems to be a danger that Its ‘total prohlbiton will In the end 1><- far loss —>»-,—"jfiil than this country's practical prohibi tion of spirits among the working classes, by a heavy tax. "Still I deeply regret." he contin ues, "that Englishmen have been found to nssi’-t In breaking American laws. Each country has the right to govern Itself. Whether the laws urn good or bail, it Is fundanugitally op posed to the doctrine of self govern ment that another country should al low ils citizen* lo encourage a breach of those laws." (iiist A. Fries Dies. tiust A. Erics, 78. retired I'nlon Pacific imilove, died Friday at his home, 80S Nortli Forty first street. Since tils retirement on a pension from the I'nlon Pacific, he had been employed by the Northwestern Hell Telephone company. II* Is survived by his widow, Johanna Fries; throe sons, Cieorge Fr i s, Rudolph Pin and Fharles A. Fries, and a daughter, Henrietta Fries. Dawes Sails Shouting His ! ‘Hell and Marias’at Ilf Aftioctfitrri Prism. New York, Tier. 29. -Gharles Cl. Dawes, former director of the budget, and Owen I). Young of the General ISlectrle company milled today on the America to wit with a reparation a committee In I’m.* 1.0 consider means of balancing the "lerman budget. General Dawes, smoking his queer pipe, the howl of which ulways seems upside down, was In one of his jwcu loir moods and refused to talk Kuro peon finance. He paced the decks of the America before sailing time, at tempting to elude newspapermen and uttering numerous of his famous "hell and Marius” every time they shot a question at him. It was none of the reporters’ busi ness, he declared, whether he had any hopes that. h« would be aide to i determine what Germany could pay In the wny of reparation*. "H< fl mid Minin," lie stormed. "If there's any hunch of men Ihnt enn help n man to Invent new cues words It's re porters." "Hava you tried to translate ‘hell nnd Marla’ Into Kreneh so Ihnt II will he useful In I’nrls, Benernr."' "Hell nnd Mnrla, no! Never thought of It," lie replied, asaumitiK "ti ex peer ion of perplexity nnd twilling Ills pipe In Ids teeth. Ills fellow voyager whs more eoni munlCHlive. "I'm Kr"InK over there, mid Mr. Young. ""ilh the Impnr tIn 1 ity or Utter Ixtiornnee; hut I have hopes that we'll accomplish some I ti Inn.” Hufua t'. tmwes, tha general's brother, and r M Crocket Ii nii'il Ihe repu rations eoutoiltlA men ns nlds w. Chief Van Deusen h Shot in Hand Revolver Trigger Catches on Drawer ami Weapon Is Discharged. Chief of Detectives Charles H. Van Deusen accidentally shot himself through the hand shortly after noon Saturday, while removing a revolver from a drawer. The trigger rought on the edge, and the revolver discharged, the bullet passing through Van Deus* n's hand in front of the knuckle. The Injury was attended by Follce Surgeon Ranee. Paul Stelnwender had asked Chief Van Deusen to get him a revolver to keep In his office, and It was for this purpi se he was removing the gun from the drawer. Dakotans for 50-Cent Tanff Lower Canadian freight rates, lower taxes and lower wages for labor per mit Canadian farmers to produce wheat for at least 50 cents a bushel less that American farmers, accord ing to Paul llanlcke, 1110 South Twenty-eighth street, who has Just re turned front a business trip through the Dakotas. •'I talked with many farmers of North And South Dakota who were downhearted at the failure which fared them." he said. "These tnen claim that the Canadian government kuheldlxes large tracts of unfenced land for raising wheat. “Average rost of harvest anil farm hands and employing in general In Canada is about half of what It I* in the Cnited States. The taxes on the land are not as high and the C'nnadlan fri tght rates are consider ably lower, these Dakota, farmers told me." State Distributes 150,000 Fish in 1923 Lincoln, Dec. 25.—Records of Hie department of agriculture, released today, show that tic Valentine fish hatchery distributed 150.000 fish, be tween the and five inches In length in 1025, Of this number more than «ir. per cent hme lived, according to the secretary of the department, (•■-ant L. Shumway. The fish distributed Include perch, black and risk bass and crapple*. The hatchery also put out 10,000 hull frogs. (•surge Roster, slate game warden has placed, throughout the state, I.:: 0 pheasants which were pur i based Iw the state at a rost of $5 each. Pheasants In Nebraska have also been tnerensed In nun.tier by I tins eggs that were given to poultry raisers to hatch. Wife of Wymore Salesman Die* ul Beal rice. Hodpital Wymore, Nrl... D''i'. 20 Mi a. It U. Julies, Jr., 52, died at a I tea trice hospital, where she underwent an operation. She was the wife "f R It Joins, traveling t ih small, former Wymore baker, and lived here many years of her chlltlh.I. her maiden i.anie hating been Myrtle lirrwcr. She Is survli *il h.v the husband and a 12 year old roll, Ihri*' tirothi rs and three sisters, ill of M \ more ami \l elnlly, and the father and mother. Mr. and Mrs \\ i: llrrwrr or I .In i oIm. Initial will I.I IVytroiri' Sail day aft* rnoon. COLI'MIIHH All building Improve ment records In Columbus have been shut tel ell during the pur 1525 with the expenditure of more than $Sso, IKIU III the 1 II I tloti lit new business blocks and residences. Colorado Cede for Attorneys J Points Morals Canon of Ethics Fixes Rules for Admitting Lawyers to Practice—Forms High Standards. Denver, Dec. 29.— A canon of ethics fir the legal profession and new rules for the admission of attorneys to practice law in Colorado have been promulgated by (lie supreme court of < 'i lorado. The philosophy of morals, the first recognized rule of ethics to be laid down In the Centennial state Is based upon the code adopted in practically all states of the union dealing with the relations of lawyers to the courts, to their clients and to others engaged in the legal profession. Tn outlining the duties of a lawyer, the canon of ethics says In part: "No client, corporation or individual, however powerful, nor any cause, civil or political, however Important, Is entitled to receive, nor should any lawyer render any service or advice Involving disloyalty to the law, or disrespect of the judicial office, or corruption of any person exercising a public office or private trust, or deception or betrayal of the public. "A lawyer will find his highest honor In a deserved reputation for fidelity to private trust and to public duty, as an honest man and as a patriotic and loyal citizen. "It Is the duty of the bar to en deavor to prevent political considera tions from outweighing Judicial fit ness in the selection of Judges. "The primary duty of a lawyer en gaged in public prosecution is not to convict, but to see that justice Is done. The suppression of facts or the secreting of witnesses capable of establishing the Innocence of the ac cused is highly reprehensible. In fixing fees It should never be forgotten that the profession is a branch of the administration of Jus tice and not a mere money getting trade. Lawyers should avoid charges that overestimate their advice and services, as wpII as those which undervalue thrm. A client's ability to pay cannot justify a charge in ex cess of the value of the service, though bis proverty may require a less charge, or even none at all. "All attempts to curry favor with juries by fawning, flattery or pre tended solicitude for their personal comfort are unprofessional. "Solicitation of business by circu lars or advertisements, or by per sonal communications or Interviews, Is unprofessional. "It Is unprofessional for a lawyer to volunteer advice to hrlng a law suit. Stirring up strife and litigation Is not only unprofessional but it is Indictable at common law. "The lawyer must decline to con duct a civil cause nr to make a defense when convinced that It Is Intended merely to harass or to In jure the opposite party or to work oppression or wrong ’’ The new rules for admission of attorneys to the bar provide that if an application for admission Is filed after Januady 1. 1927, the applicant "shall furnish proof that at the be glrtnlng of his law studies, or with in six months thereafter. h« had a general education, In addition to a high school course, equivalent to that of one year of an ordinary under graduate course In an approved col lege or university.” This Is a new requirement In Colo rado and puts the state In the front rank of states so far as educational requirements are concerned. Another departure In rules of ad mission Is the creation of a special committee to Investigate the char acter of all applicants for admission to the bar. Sentiment for Coolidge Grows Hr Associated Press. < hl' ign. Pec. 29.—Sentiment favor ing President Coolidge for the re publican presidential nomination Is increasing In every section cf the country, William M. .Butler, general chairman of th« Coolidge campaign, declared In a statement here yester day. Coolidge clubs are being organised, he declared. In many sectlous of the country, many admirers of the prest dent forming these chtha on their own initiative. Entire Family Arrested in Hunt for Counterfeiters Chicago, Dec, 29.—Five additional attests were made today by federal agents In their efforts to run down the hand of counterfeiters Involved In the making of Imitations of flO feder a] reserve notes. One of the five was said to lie an ex convict and others comprised nn entire family. Including two school girls. Millinery Buyer Eea\e>. Marie Fla nn lira n, manager of the trimmed hat department of the Mae toraon Millinery company, leave* for \>w York city today to buy millinery for aprlnjr. B Nai B Kith Head ior Comin" Year Chosen Vstty %VL?tin •S ■__ Harry Trustin who was elected president of the Omaha lodge of B'nal B'rith, Jewish fraternal organization, at the annual election of officers held at a meeting of the organization last wepk. Four Are Killed as Train Strikes Auto ff> \*»oriate<J Pr«w. Columbia, S. C., Dec. US.—Four per sons were killed and a fifth probably fatally Injured today when their auto mobile and a Southern railway train were In a collision at a grade crossing near Aiken, S. C.. according to word received here. The dead, three men and a woman, were traveling in an automobile with a New York license number, and are believed to have been tourists bound for Florida. The names of the dead were given as A1 Berber. J. Talin and Mr and Mrs. Paul Resen. Two-Gun Bandits Seize Payroll B> International »w« Service. St. Louis. Dec. 29.—Three two-gun bandits, pistols in each hand, swept into the office of the H. E. Funstop and company, fruit dealers, this afternoon, lined up 10 employes against a wall and escaped with a pay roll amounting to $2.3*30. An investi gation is under way to determine why a patrolman assigned to the building this morning was away from his post. Father and Sen Are Sought as Holdups Denver. Colo., 5x-c. 29.—Working on j the theory that a father and tton are responsible for several “stiekups ' in the re* ilentlal district liere, police nre searching for a boy about 9 y«*ars old and a companion aged about So. According to police, the man forces the victim at the point of a gun to hold up his hands while the boy searches for money and valuables Both wi nr masks. Onlv 21 Names Are J on Capital Rum List Washington. lx»c. J** —Commission er Biair of the bureau' of internal rev - enue declared in a formal statemen* today that the bureau's agents had found a list containing 21 names In j the recent raid which has become the I center of a bootleg scandal here. The statement emphatically denied knowledge of the missing list of sev eral hundred names taken in the^raid. U. S. Cruiser Is Sent to Honduras Washington. Dee. 29—The armored (ruiser Hochcslen. flagship of the I"nited States s|>eciul servi.-* squad ron in Central and South American waters, has been sent to Port of Amnpala, Honduras, and will remain In that vicinity until the present dls turt>anres in Honduras and southern Mexico have quieted. More McCray Indictment?. Indianapolis. Ind, Dec. t'9.—The Marlon county grand jury which In vestigated the financial affairs of Governor XVnrr.n T. McCray ami re turned eight Indictments ngalnst him charging forgery, etnlszal.ment and larceny today retui■■ti seven addi tional Indictments charging specific instances of thi e .-rimes. The Indict ments made no new accusation# against the governor. Ta\i Orixcr Vrrc-ted. John Melvin, taxi driver, was ar rested Saturday on a charge of violating the II o rison narcotic law. lie Is alleged to have had a quant.i.v of dope on his person.* lie recently was released from th« penitentiary on a similar charge. -—- i Year, Beginning \\ ith 1928 May Consist of 13 Months It* \(*o«lnlr<l I'rfM Cincinnati, tv. l>ee. 2#.—livery tear beginning with I!*:*, will consist of 13 months Instead of 12, If nstrononier* have their "ay at the I.engue of Na t|,ms committee meeting on onlendar revision next year. The plan for in serting an extra month In the pro posed world wldn onlendar to be evolved at the meeting was explnln.il liefore the American Association for the Advancement of .Science here to day by M. H. Cotsworth of Van coiner. It C . Its originator. lie o h month. under Ihe plan, would consist of 2K days, oi* four com plele weeks. Ihe 13th month to Inserted between June and July and to lie known ns Sol, In leap years, hap da) Instead of falling at the end of February would he Inserted at the . ml of the new month, and there also would he an extra holiday on t*e cetnbar 2'J, not designated s* an* particular day of the week. Sunday always would bo the first day of the month. Kaster also would bo set at a per manent time Instead of being gov erned,by I he position of the moon, ns under the present Gregorian calendar. Tentatively. April V the middle point between the earliest and latest Kaster under the present system, has been selected. The Gregorian calendar. with Its months of uneven length. Is incon venlent to present da\ business and domestic life. Mr, t’otsworth de elated While salaries, rents ai founts and budgets In many eases are on a monthly liasts. the dutvrep aneles tn the length of months eause tntieh eogfuslen, he said Should the new calendar, said to Pave (hi* approval of representatives of a number of eounlrlep, be adopted, national holidays might be dated at will, but a translation of blrlh dates mto term* of the new •ystcm would l* necespatv' Want a r'virn'' Head the Classified ads. Uai ■ Head the Classified win. -: UNION Outfitting company V/e Give Green Trading Stamps ' With VII Porfha*e*. (A Few Trudt* Murk Lints Only Kxffptoi.) Visit tin* Manip Bodomptlon Station KOI'Bill FLOOR. 2 Sales in 1 Down and HALF OFF A genuine and bona fide discount sale of distinctive wearing aj> ]>arel—just the sort yov%^ are needing for now and later wear—at a price far lower than you would expert to pav for such desirable styles. Brin? 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