J ; y a * ♦ WEATHER FORECAST fi9tiON Saturday, probably thunder show- fcUl «!•*; not much chance in temperature. . ^_ i ■■■-■- ■■ ■■ ■■■» ^ VOL. 53—NO. 48. ftg- K TtSPXtt OMAHA. SATURDAY. AUGUST 11, 1923. *_oB-,.r,i,l \TzJ."a »'“» TWQ CENTS '* ' I 15,000 Omahans Join in Service to Perpetuate Memory of President Assemblage at Ak-Sar-Ben Field Expresses Determination That Spirit of Harding Shall Live—Speaker Ranks Him With Lincoln and McKinley—Career of Public f Service Example for Youth to Follow. Military Ceremony Is Legion’s Mark of Respect Determination that the memory of Warren <>. llr.rding shall live hi thought and action marked the great mass meeting Friday afternoon at Ak-8ar-Ben field, where 15.000 Omahans joined millions in all parts of the country to honor the late president. Brilliant August sunlight shining on the field after tong rains which lifted only an hour or two before the program, a cool wind fluttering the scores of American flags which edged the top of tlie grandstand and caught up the festoons of sable hunting, emphasized this air of forward looking. The fnces of the school children in the front seats, the crisp note im ^pyarted by the group of army officers and the veterans in uniforms re splendent with medals, although sobered by a mourning band worn on the arm, repeated the same theme of high resolve, of dedication for the future. When many thousands thronged® 7 the union station in the midnight blackness of Monday morning to watch the passage of the funeral train, that was the zero hour of grief too dark for any outward expression. Yesterday's services were another matter—a mellowed grief, a gracious ‘ memory, a lofty inspiration. Dead March Played. Precisely at 3 a few moments after the body of President Hardir.g had reached the grave in far away Marion, the Tangier band, a striking note of color in navy blue uniforms edged With scarlet, took up the solemn strains of the dead march from “Saul.” The grandstand holding 10,000 per sons was already full, and long lines of street cars, automobiles and pedestrians were still converging upon the field and pouring into the thousands of seats placed between the grandstand and the speakers pavilion. Some 30 feet behind the pavilion stood a 10-foot portrait of Mr. Harding draped with black and white bunting. As the music of the dead march faded. Mayor James C. Dahlman, as president of the meeting, raised his hand and commanded a moment of absolute silence on th< part of the great throng before him. In that sdence. Bishop R. V. Shayler^came •^To ward and began the reading of the realm of the Righteous Man,' [‘•aim 37. Example* of RiRhteouino!**. After recalling to the minds of the audience the, cause for which all were gathered and the millions who were assembled for the same purpose in other parts of the country, Bishop Shayler spoke briery of V\ arren t». Harding as an example of righteous ness. "When President Harding kissed the Bible at his inaugural two years ago,” said the bishop, "lie presently quoted as expressing his purposes a \erse from Mlcah, ‘What does the Lord require of thee but to deal righteously, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God.' In the circle of his duties from that day until today when he Is laid In the earth at Marion, one may trace his effort to shpw that righteousness which exalteth a nation. ■ These things which President Harding so greatly desired,” con tinued the bishop, “are things which we need most bitterly today* There is need to deal justly with the weak and oppressed of the earth, to show mercy in binding up the wound* left by the war. It is time indeed that w? set ourselves to walk humbly with our God. ” Closes With Prayer. Bishop Shaylor concluded his re marks with a moving and eloquent r,raver giving thanks for the life of ■*SHarren Gamaliel Harding and be seeching solace for the bereaved wife and father. He asked also guidance for the nation and for President Cal vin Coolldge, upon whoso shoulders fall the burdens of a great and lonely office. No sooner came the amen than I here followed the strains of Bros! dent Harding's favorite hymn, ‘‘Lead Kindly Light,” roiling out in organ like tones from the throats of the Klwanis quartet. This quartet in cludes H J. Schneider, Justin lfel grin.. Harry Disbrow, and A. L. J lobbs. / John I*. Kenned- In the principal address bracketed “the Godlike Lin ,-oln. the beloved McKinley and the lovable Harding." -All,'’ said the speaker In part, “died for their country. They were all plain, sirnplp. Godfearing men. Wiyb ab-olute devotion to duty. Liv i. g. they were commanding figures: dead, they will continue to control and direct the standards of policies of He even sees as a possibility the restoration of the old mon archy in Bavaria, where the influence of Berlin is negligible, and a new Rhineland republic, jealously guarded by colored warriors of Senegul and Cochin China. When Lloyd George predicts, he bases his predictions upon s knowledge of tangled European affairs second to none in the world. His articles, appearing in Omaha exclusively in The Omaha Sunday Bee, are well worth reading. READ LLOYD GEORGE IN The Omaha Sunday Bee Harding’s Bod v Borne to Home of His Father Marlon, O.—Military guard of honor reverently caries the body of Warren G. Harding , late president, into the home of Dr. George T. Harding, his fathrr. Thousands line surrounding streets, silently to watch the funeral march. j Not a Glad Hand, but a Strong One, Takes Helm of Ship of State President Coolidge, Lacking the Effusive Geniality of Many Politicians, Works Faithfully but Silently, Promising Little and Doing Much. By M\RK SILLIVAN. Washington. Aug 10.—Between President Cooiidge and h private citizen of Boston named Franklin Stearns, there is' an unusual relation. Because the easiest way to describe such a relation is to express It in terms of analogy, to something else already well known, a good many have been speaking of this relation in terms of the relation of Mark Hanna to McKinley, and of Colonel House to Wilson.' In fact, however, there is not much more tn this analogy than the common element of a devoted friendship in alt three cases. Mark Hanna was a super PQlltician; Colonel House in his quiet way. was no small figure as a poli tician and has a legitimate r.eal to function in the field of statesmanship and mold the world to his conception of hotter things Mr. Stearna, on the other hand !• no politician at all. The relation 1-e tween Cooiidge and Ptearns is purely romanti. It is more like the relation of a father to son 'hart anything else Steams was an older graduate of Amherst college and a trustee of It. In the course of time Cooiidge. as a younger graduate making his wav in public life, came to Stearns, at tention. Stearna liked him and de termined to push him along. Stearns railed the attention of other influen tial Amherst graduates to their young fellow alumnus and made him the center of a loyal group of Amlteret graduates who took pride in Coolidge's career. No Excuses or Explanations. There are two true stories about Cooiidge w lilch are strongly illus trative of his habit of mind and way of doing things <>i e of these stories happens to include the history- of tli* beginning of Ills acquaimance w th Stearns Stearns, with the other* trustees of Amherst, was putting n sewer system to the college amt wanted to eonneet it with the s*wer system of the ad joining town of Northampton. Tills required a formal act of the legisla ture Inasmuch as Cooiidge was the representative of Northampton In the legislature, and was also an alumnus of Amherst thev went to him to put through the necessary legislation. Tribute of Lincoln Woman Most Touching !»* InternsUAnal *er»ire. Marion. <> . Aug 10 —Among ihr thousand* of messages of i ondolence which poured in on .'Its Harding to day, nonr touched h*r more deeply than Hie following: -1720 Vine Ht . "I.inrnln. Neb, To Mrs Warren ft Hat tilt . Itenr Madam: We wish to expiess our sympathy toward you on thi? Hour of deepest sorrow for our great leader snd president. I ant pending a small token that I worked myself with the wish that n may he placed on the casket of the late president. We cannot send flowers B* they cost tno much. U» are pom people with a large family of 10 children, ranging from IK veins down to T months, so 1 thought this small flag would lie yery nice. We are Knglish, hut my children are all American horn. May the Heavenly Kn t her Rive you strength to bear your loss, from a humble mother. “Your t espectfully "MllS. H. Ilul.AIDS Cabinet to Continue. WunhlniHon. A tig 10 Whfttcvrr r* aUnation* may ha RiibmUlct! It cabinet member* hr h s'*ruK of Presi dent Harding* dsalh. u ir consider.-d tniprohnbl* Unit any will lx* tendered the new president int mediated All t nblnet officer*, It win Indicated yesterday, will continue to serve. #«t least /or the present, in conformity with tb* request of President « "olitln thrit ihry not even submit their reals nations as a formality, Coolidge listened , but did not sav aj word, In the manner now recognized as habitual with him. Neither did Coolidge do anything about it at that, session of the legislature. The Am herst trustees felt a. little peevish about Coolidge'* silence and inaction. Later on they learned ftiar Coolidge s failuie to act at that see sion of the legislature was due to the fart that there were only 10 days remaining, so that as a matter of parliamentary routine, it was im possible. So far as Colidge s silence had any meaning. the Amherst trustees explained It to themselves on the theory that <'oblige felt they ought to have known enough about (Torn t«* l*«r# Two. Column Arizona Hangs Border Haider Kffurt# l>x Mexican# ami Ari zona Citizen# Kail lo Saxe Life. Hi \ft«ueistnl Press. Hornier. Ariz., Aug. Id.—Xlanuel | Martinez was hanged at the state j penitentiary this morning fur the murder of .1. Frank Pearson, post master at Kiib.v, \rlz.. in a border bandit raid in \ugiist. I9UI. The trap wns sprung at 5:11 o'clock and Xfar tine/ was pronounced dead II min utes later. The condemned man walked to hit fate with no display of emotion after men and organizations of high posi tion in Arizona aid Mexico had failed in i heir Iasi effort to secure a commutation of his sentence at the hands of the state board of pardons and paroles. • Denver Bandits Murder leacher Denver. (’ok' Auk HP- Lying Uu . conscious on the lawn in front of the I lesidcnce of A 1*' Welker, where she tad been residing Mi*?* Helen May Itodgm, 50. .« school teacher of Wilev. Kan., was found by pedestrians late last night. She riled while she was being rushed to a hospital. Shortly afterward, three suspects. I whose names police refused, to divulge, were taken into custody in connect ion with the rase. Physicians found a bruise at the base of the woman’s skull and it is helie\ed she was slugged police are. working on the theory that footpads | knocked Miss Hodgtn unconscious and robbed her. as her pock'd book • and a gold witch she ordinarily car ried were reported missing The woman came to Denvei recent !v In search of a position as h school teacher. She s believed to have been on her way home from the business , district, when she was attacked. Pa pers n her possession Indicate ah* ! had three sisters, two of them being 1 Ml*. \V S i la ley of Mil*,, Kan.,! and Mis R L Houghton «»f La V «*ga« N M Police I' ire on I' ood It ioter*; One Killed. 10 Wounded II. A.*„, litto.l Prr.t (.'refold. Germany, Ann 1 o (In man l*'lice today flyed on a crowd of *v\nnl thou*.m,I olio w.ie etac log demon*! ration iigalnat ihr scarcity of food and the high i ,i*t of living, killing on* nod wound lug 1(V Home Itoldied l.o* Angeles, Auk 10 Mi* I G Tnitlmi repotted to police lestetd.o Hint two men who obtained enlruneo to her residence by elating they wrur employe* of i department none. took $11 nop ip ),’w,|. .m,| mop.'y weh llwtn when they left I Fullerton Store Loot Is Recovered bv Officers Here Woman Arrested Vt hen Ihirdi of Stolen Goods Is 1 aken in Raid on Omaha Home. — .V i... ! •: a house at ;:18 Woolworth avenue yesterday resulted in thCj recover', of alarm a third of the mer chandise taken ;n the sensational Ful lerton. Neb., store robbery of three weeks aao. and the arrest of Mrs. F. Mastrasrigo The raid will probably lead to more arrests and the unraveijng of the rob bery mystery, according to fjeorge Townley. president of the Reliable De tectivs bureau, whose operatives traced the stolen merchand.se and planned the raid. Entered After Daylight. The Fullerton i obbery was one of the most sensational that has been committed in this section for several years. Bandits, in two automobiles, broke into the store shortly after day light, and escaped with goods valued! at more than J8.000. They w*re pur sued eastward by sheriffs of several counties and at Valley there was an exchange of gunfire. The robbers escaped. Might men. Including President Townley. Fred Kreme. sheriff of Nance county^ Deputy Sheriff Thes trup of Douglas county and George If Bowman of Fullerton, an employe of the Penney Sr Son store of Fuller ton. took jpait in the raid. Woman i» silent. Mis Must!aarigo was taken to Cen tral police station, hut would not dis cus* the presence of ilte stolen mer chandise in her house. The ofip.ers aie looking for hn hgsband. they an nounced “We heard that'there were large quantities of goods being sold in Omaha last Tuesday so we investi gated said Mr Townley of the de teettve agency We finally obtained some of ilte goods, and Mr. Bowman «f the robbed store identified them by price tags Then we traced the goods to the house "it Woolworth avenue." Some It) silk dte«sr«. about a dozen liolts of silk and many women's w.lists were recoveied Five Prohibition \pents (Yapped 1>\ Moonshiner* Hazard Kv . Aug 10.—Sheriff Holliday ami a posse of deputies left here today for a retime spot in the mountains on t’oekeriMs fork of I,oet Creek lj miles front It re. where five prohibition enforcement agents, headed by If M. Stewart, ate reported to have been surrounded by moon shinets entrenched in the hills. Ac cording 10 the report ..hO shots have been exchanged in th» Kittles so far. bui no <.isinilt!es h»\ been reported. Dead President Sleeps Beneath Ivy-Clad Roof of Tomb in Home Town Last Honors Paid to Chief Executhe Who Died in Ser\iee of His Country—Simple Ceremonies Mark Funeral at Marion—Huge Crowds Visit City to Pay I Sorrowful Respect. Widow Faces Lonely Years Ahead With Bravery Marion, Aug. 10.—Harding of Ohio is home tonight, sleeping time away near the mother at whose knee his first childish dream of greatness was prattled. Before his tomb, as the chiming \oiees of (lie choir sang softly among the trees. Nearer, My (iod. to Thee." another tender. brate woman stood with aching heart, her teiled face lifted to the »h). A moment later rlw stepped a meager moment into the dim tault where the dead husband's journey of life had ended. Then she turned away, brate to the lasr. to face the lonely years ahead She waited not to see the iron gates closo softly upon her dead. New York Silent in Memory of w Late President Hu«h Falls 0\er City as Citi zens of Metropolis Pay Tribute to Warren Harding. New York. Aug. 10—Hushed with a reverent stillness unparalleled In its history as a metropolis, New York today paid sorrowful tribute to the memory of Warren G. Harding. Its great banks, brokerages, stores, harbor deserted, the city turned to its myriad churches where the sad ceremonies at Marion were being echoed. It was more than a Sundav hush that fell. Sunday, to New Yorks millions, is a day as m l.h for relaxation a» for worship It is a day for the beaches, the parks and th* country: a day for motoring, car rides and golf. Today it was almost as .f there was a funeral in every home. Broad thoroughfaic.- were stripiied of their traffic. Subway and elevated trains, running on reduced schedules were sparsely occupied. Trains to the shore resorts were almost empty. The resorts themselves were as quiet as if in winter. The apex of lie day of mourning , ame at noon when, w:th millions assembled in the city’s churches to do sorrow tul homage to the dead pres ident, with the guns of the surround ir.g forts and military posts booming the presidential salute, and with hun dreds of church bells tolling, the city's! transit lines ground to a hah and its I connection* with the outs.de world j were temporarily snapped. Another climax came » few mn uses after i when the wires of the | Associated Press, connecting the na tion with Marlon, flashed taps, then subaided for two minute# into an un accustomed silence. A cast hush filled the city. Grew* of ships and tugs in the harbor stood at attention. Foreign vessel* dipped their colors. The stars and stri|>es of the Amen can liners fluttered at half-mast F.ven after the piesidetits hodv had beer consigned to its tomb, the riourtving continued Legitimate the aters and vaudeville houses weieclos ed Broadway vva* almost dark. A j few of the motion picture hou*- »—' all i losed dur.ng the day—opened thi* evening, but their crowds were small. Some gave * teuch of mourn ing to their programs by displaying the la;e president's picture oti the screen while organs whispered hi? favorite hymn. Haney to Return. Washington. Aug. 10—George Hat vev. .American ambassador to Great, Britain, spent nearly an hour jester day in conference with Piesident Coolidgc before leaving for Marlon to attend Preaident llardlng * funeral. The Harding proposal for American participation in the world court. Mr. Harvey said, was ore of the subject#] discussed with Mr. Goolidge but he declined to give any detail* The ambassador said he planned to icturn to his po*' st London early next moti: Omaha Bee Made ' 43.1% of All the Gains in Display Advertising for the First Half of 1923 THREE OMAHA PAPERS (1) Omaha Bee Gain. 33,416 (2) Second Paper . 29,728 (3) Third Paper . 14,396 “ Watch The Bee Grow" Harding is home forever from life's high places, where the restless, heaay winds of ambition blow; home be neath Ohio st.il, for above him tie vaulted roof is mantled w ith giass grown sod; home among the friends and neighbors of his youth the kind ly people of a kindly town. T;me ;» ended for him and the shouting a> d clamor that surrounds the gieat is done. It was a long road to that Silent vault about which theie closed to night a guard of the citize n soldiery of his own state. There was endless ceremony of the nation’s and the peoples hashing to mark the way. But it ended simply, calmly as 'he dead would have had It end. Simple Service. Aside from the multitude that walled the long way from hi* father e home to the v ault and those others close packed to make a living setting for the funeral rites, there was not much to mark it as the burial of one who had held highest power t.n his grasp. There were the tanned men of his guard from the sister services of the nation. the admirals and the generals who formed his honor escort, the friend and com rade who now is president in hi* stead, the colleagues of h.s gr:e£ stricken cabinet. That was all. ei cept at the last, distant gun fire as he came to his tomb and the soft tones of a ougie sounding a soldier requiem as the gates were closed. Otherwise the funeral service was that of a simple and much-loved citizen of Onio. For all Ohio seemed to have come today to bid him fare well. Throngs whose number* will never be known passed beside h:s casket and looked their last upon the dead fai» before the lime fo- :h# las* ournev came. (irrat Hag i/ad> Way. From hts father's house be went out again, carried by ;h« steadfast men who have stood constantly to guard a dead commander. Xo solemn music of band* or military pageant marked his going ««te the g m: d,g of the pt-sideiu drooping in mourn ing and tarried before him to the gates of the tomb as he went. In cars behind the simple heaissr that carried now this honored leader came President Cooiidge and the cab inet and the friends at d -iose kr . Theie too. tame t'h.ef Justice Taft and tJenera! Pershing. East to leave the memorted house was Mis Hard ing, in black and with ' eii draw it close, atsd just ahead of hti w il.ved the old father, h* face plainly ?b.-\ - mg the asonv of his grief Through e s.ltrt f..c wailed s reet the toir-ge |',cs. d t id i oirfi the ip: rer t> t>e*q,net -einctety. \ « >1 tame tow ai d e c.ies ■ g « spoke afar in honor. Old < onir.tdt - riyerr l ue vault stands ivy-wrapped a- t sei Kh k into the gentle hill w.ih lit tie spa, • hr foie - s,. fe !.rv ..! main was halted at a distance a-.d tl.w • asket lifted down to be carried to a resting place tie fore t e open en trance to the tomb. Already a gtx>up of senator* who knew this dead presi dent under the • apitol dome be for* passed to the tvhite House we e - ready" gathered n waiting, in 1 « across the roadway that runs befo » the entrance. With them sto. d t e comrades of camp.ng days Fold. Edi son. and Firestone The cabinet family came to stand closer, at the foot of the casket w:.b the.r new chief standing sorrow fu. v* among.them The admiral* in g’mirt Ing ttli te lined the way to the ief', the generals to the right and beyond, behind the cabinet stood the little party of intimate* and freed* w .» made the Masks journey that death broke so suddenly Then came Di Hard mg w.th t • snows of h:s to v ea showing or h.s bared head and then the brave widow walking to her place at the right '? the'casket with Secretary i'hr«t,an and the Dieinbcv* of the grief bowed family I-VSI Service Begins 'V :h the shadow of - e ,v.,i of ihr mull, the churchmen took their place and frv'in the ahrubbe-v that screened them ihe choir sao* (tuts le Vase Ten. 1 etwmn III 1 The Weather ror ;« hoar* ondny at 7 p ?r Avium t# ms Tamp^nat are H:§h#f A - $' n’un ’* ** ' - ■al . * Total ««c«»a » • Jana*r\ : l*. HMaiha Mumldh* Pmattai* a tn V >or> ;< 7pm »J l>M.plMllon and Hnndrrdlh* Total o *.t Total »:n»» JtRuaiv l* .tt. dofiOior oy, t allrtuM* TfiH|MMl«rf« n ; i r « ** * ' r tt ■ : :: ■:!:: 3 * r -v.. ;, : r -.**