The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, September 12, 1923, CITY EDITION, Page 3, Image 3

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    Brandeis Party
fi
Returns from
African Hunt
^ Omaha Hunters Have Vivid
Tales of Jungles and Bring
Bark Many
Trophies.
Mr. and Mrs. E. John Brandeis ar
rived home Tuesday morning from
the Jungles of Africa and are in their
bungalow, atop the Brandeis stores.
Itself a civilised Jungle filled with
trophies of previous expeditions.
This vfall. slim, dark young mer
chant-prince and sportsman doesrf’t
boast.
"Any thrilling adventures?” he was
asked.
"Only one real thrill, I think," he
smiled. "I had lain in ambush near
the lion bait for several nights when
finally a lion appeared and I shot him
in the shoulder with a .405 winchester.
He fled and we followed his track the
next day for eight hours. We finally
found him and he came toward us
roaring, a terrifying sound. I could
say he charged us hut I don’t think
it was a charge. I put nine more
bullets into him before I knocked him
ifver.”
Rhino Hunt Child’s Play.
' "It must have been exciting to
hoot the rhinoceros?” said an inter
viewer.
•The young hunter's lip curled in
shorn.
"Nothing to it," he said. "A child
cbuld shoot a rhino. The rhino Is
yellow.' He won’t fight. In fact, a
'ion isn’t dangerous unless he’s
wounded.”
And here appeared Mrs. Brandeis.
i slim, blonde, dainty, smiling young
woman.
"My wife heat me shooting lions,"
-ays E. John proudly. "She got three.
I only got two.”
"Weren’t you terribly frightened?"
-he was asked.
“Oh, no," smiled the young hunt
ress. "I was in the ‘crow's nest' up
jri a tree whert I shot my first one.
»ut I really wasn't frightened when
1 killed any of them."
They saw elephants, also, hut as
none of them had tusks weighing 60
pounds they were not allowed to
shoot them.
Here s the last.
Besides her three lions. Mrs. Bran
leis shot a zera, a wildebeest, three
kinds of antelope and a waterbuck.
E. John shot, besides his lions, a
i hineroceros, two zebra, two wilde
beest, eight antelope, a waterbuck,
three monkeys, a leopard, three lm
paia, two oryx, three silver jackals
and two topi.
The skins and other trophies are
?n the way to Omaha.
Moving pictures were taken of the
hunt. One scene shows Mrs. Bran
deis shooting a lion and another
shows Mr. Brandeis pumping bullets
into the big rhino. He is having a
table top and a number of canes
made from the thick hide and some
umbrella stands from the fore feet
of the rhino.
Mike Canies Along.
And th( n there Is Mike, whom they
brought along. Milto is not a wild
animal, but a "regular fellow," as
both the Bramlelscs Bay. He is j
g^Ml'ing man with long, light hair. His
full name is Mike (Cottar and lie and
Ills brother. Pat, were guides on the
Brandeis expedition. They managed
the 67 native porters and guided the
expedition to the places where the
wild animals were.
"Mike was my buddy as well as
my guide,” said E. John, "He hail
a bad attack of malaria in the jungle
and I thought the trip hack here
would do him good. So I brought
him along, and he is going to stay
with us a while."
Mike said he is going hack to Africa
after his visit here.
Mr. Brandeis had an attack of ma
laria and lost some weight. But Mrs.
Brandeis escaped the malady alto
gether.
E. John said they didn't see any
of the hlg pythons and boa constrict
ors in the jungle, hut he saw the
marks in the sand where they had
passed.
"Where will your next trip be?"
E. John was asked.
“I want to try to settle down to
business for while," he said, “but I
think when we go it will he to
India."
Whioping Boys in Honolulu
Disapproved by Judge Day
' Whipping given boy gangsters on
court order.”
This was the headline on a news
^ paper story of a session of juvenile
rt in Honolulu. The clipping was
received by District Judge L. B. Day
Tuesday morning form N. O. Talbot
of Omaha, who haH been traveling In
the south Pacific.
"You might get some ideas from
this,” wrote Mr. Talhot.
But Judge Day. who has charge of
'uvenlle court, believes that moral
mission is quite superior to the whip
ciing method.
Payroll Pandit Suspect,
Freed, Told to Leave Town
Ray Kmerson, n treated with
Charles Mataen by I’atrolman Ban
Danbaum for Investigation In connec
lion with the $9,000 payroll holdut.
Saturday noon, wan given a 60-day
luapended sentence In municipal
•ourt Tuesday morning and told to
let out of town.
Mat sen la still held by police for
.nvestlgatlon. Following his arrest
*10 said he did not commit the rob
bery, but that he could tell who did
Huge Turbine Water Putnp
Put in at Florence Plant
A new 60,000,000-gallon capacity,
In w pressure, stram turbine-driven
centrifugal pump, was placed In oper
ation yesterday at the water plant In
Florenro for the first time, pumping
water from the river.
A 50,000,000 gallon capacity high
pressure pump, which will force wa
ter Into the city tnalns, will lie
placed In service some time tills
week, It was announced.
Pension Voted.
Members of the city council Tues
day voted to pay Mrs. Michael Hemp
any, widow of Michael Dempsey,
former chief of police, a pension of
(50 a month.
ZR-1 Makes Successsful Trial Flight
Lakehurst, N. J.. Sept, 11.—The
United States naval dirigible ZFM
successfully completed a continuous
12-hour flight today when it descend
ed at the naval air station here at
6:45 p. m. daylight time.
The first American-made rigid air
ship had left the ground at 6 a. m.
on a cruise which took it over New
Jersey to New York city, up the
Hudson river to Yonkers and return
down the length of Manhattan, across
to Newark, New Brunswich, Trenton,
Camden, Philadelphia and return
home.
The "Leviathan of the air” thus
concluded its fourth trial flight and
its first of more than three hours con
tinuous flying, sailing at elevations
of from 1.000 to G.000 feet, serenely
and without Incident.
Thousands of spectators watched
the mistress of the air from roof tops
and streets as it sailed smoothly
above them, sometimes with all mo
tors sending her rapidly forward,
other times with some propellers mo
itonless as she cut her speed.
Aviators Film
Drama of Skies
Report as Eclipse Passed Red
dish Tinge of Flame Leaped
Along Horizon.
By AMOrlatnl Praia.
Santa Barbara, Cal., Sept. 11.—The
only successful photographs of the
sun's corona made in southern Cali
fornia during the eclispe of the sun
yesterday are believed to be ones
made by Prof. James Worthington of
London and Dr. Alfred K. Burton,
professor emeritus of astronomy in
the Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology, near here, today.
Professor Worthington stated last
night that four of the negatives de
veloped by him were almost perfect
and would take rank with the best
ever made during a solar eclipse.
Professor Worthington and Dr.
Burton headed an expedition at an
I Angeles, Sept. II.—Three
hundred rhirkens thought night
had route when darkness accom
panied yesterday’s eclipse of the
sun and went to their coops at
Artesla, a suburb, but were pre
vented from going to roost by
thieves who took them to new
homes, according to reports to the
sheriff’s office here.
observation station established north
of Santa Barbara. Weatjper conditions
there were more favorable than at any
other spot on the Pacific coast, ac
cording to the scientists. The equip
ment used was an especially con
structed "ceolostat.”
By Anaarlatrrl Press.
Ran Diego, Cal., Sept, 11.—Lieut.
John A. MacReady, one of the two
army sfliers who broke the world's
record In a nonstop flight from New
York to San Diego, figured in an
other novel undertaking yesterday
In a flight of 16,000 feet alti
tude to observe the eclipse cut off
from a view of the earth by clouds
that spread over the coast clear to
Knsenada in Lower California, with
Capt. A. W. Stevens, noted army
photographer. MacReady battled the
clouds for three hours In his deter
minatlon to gain an unobstructed
view of the eclipse. They were wing
ing along In utter darkness with
tongues of blue flames shooting from
their exhaust pipes and with wings
and fuselage drenched with moisture
when the drama of the skies was
enacted. They flew 300 miles to get
one picture, but were foiled by the
elements.
In Area of Totality.
Lieutenant Wyatt and Chief Pho
tographer P. A. McDonough flew at
17,000 feet, Just Inside the area of
totality.
At the Instant of totality Lieuten
ant Wyatt saw with remarkable
Soviet War Chief
Reported Slain
~~~
Leon TrotzUy
By International »ws Seri Ire.
London, Sept. 11.—Leon Trotzky.
commissar for war in the Russian
soviet government, is reported to
have been assassinated, according to
a Central News dispatch from Ber
lin this afternoon. The report was
said to have been received in Berlin
from Moscow.
The Russian trade delegation here
had no confirmation of the report and
discredited it.
By Interniillonal News Service.
Berlin. Sept. 11.—The Russian em
bossy this afternoon formally denied
the report that Leon 'Trotzky has
been assassinated at Moscow,
clearness ■ shadow approaching
from the southwest, but It came so
inpidly lie was unable to snap his
stop watch before it had passed. He
11 ported that the horizon of the Pa
cific was marked by a reddish-pink
glow that extended about one tenth
the length of the horizon to the
right of the shadow. As the shadow
passed the reddish tinge of flame
leaped along the entire Horizon and
did not diminish for several minutes.
Navy airmen scattered over a wide
area and flying at altitudes varying
from 7,000 to 10,000 feet were suc
cessful in getting not onli* excellent
motion pictures of the corona, but
also faint but sufficient photographs
of the fleeting shadow that swept
with terrific speed down from the
northward at the moment of totality.
Scientists Puzzled.
Scientists are extremely puzzled
over one bit of information that
dropped from the clouded skies with
the naval aviators. This was a sea
of lavendar colored clouds.
Lieut. Donald Duncan, flying at
8,000 feet over the mountains near
Poway, sighted the shadow with un
usual clearness approaching from the
northwest. It engulfed him In black
darkness as It passed. He said the
horizon during the period of totality
was rimmed with a reddish light that
flared forth at times with great brll
hance and then died down until It
seemed like the glow from a small
lire.
wver zUO,000 sufferers from
Rheumatism, Kidney and
Bladder Diseases,Li verCom
plaints, Stomach ailments
and Nervous Breakdowns,
come each year to this resort
to regain their health. i
Don’t Suffer—
Send for free Descriptive
Hoof let No 30 telling the
many facts you should know about
this wonderful hralth-buildint;
resort and its famous sprint's.
P***U,*r Commercial ,
- . c,Mb * e***lclcr Springe, Mo. j
Ak Program
Is Broadcast
Listeners in Seattle and Can
ada Get Free Member
ships to Den.
—
For the first time in the hietory
i of Ak-Sar Ben, Samson's den show
program was broadcast by radio Mon
day night, from WOAW. Te show waa
put on with full lyrics and lines, with
every member of the cast present.
Five new members were taken into
the organization. Samson announced
at the beginning of the entertain
nient that any person who acknowl
edged hearing the show at a distance
of 1,000 miles or more would be
granted a free membership In Ak
Sar-Ben. The first answer came
from Seattle, the next from J. A.
Macklln, Saskatoon. Canada. Two
messages frcm Calgary and another
from Saskatoon arrived too late to
be acknolwedged over the radio last
night. All five of the men were d*
dared members.
The show was the same as that
put on at each of the weekly den
shows directed by Samson at the
den. It waa a pod wesson perform
ance and was given In celebration
of the opening of the Ak Bar Ben fall
fpstlval today.
Wool Men MpH Marketer*.
Chicago, Sopt. II.—Directors of the
I National Wool Warehouse and Stor
age company met today with the
hank representatives and with rep
resentatives of the marketing associa
tions. The company plans to act aa
rational sales and warehousing agent
for state and regional wool growers
associations.
“We hope to effect a plan today
which will finance the co-operative
marketing of wool by the growers
themselves," said Matt Staff of HeJ
rna. Mont., president of the eomany,
“eliminating the usual welling agen
cies. The loans, according to our
present proposal, would lie extended
to the regional associations of wool
growVra, which will market through
us. We believe In financing wool
outside the selling sgeney that pro
duction may m l be affected by price
fuctuatlons.”,
Kough House
Raid Described
Wife of Man Complaining
Against Morals Squad
, Testifies.
City count'll opened the hearing of
charges Tuesday morning, brought by
Charles Nejepinsky, 1417’4 South Six
teenth street, against Sergeant Ernest
Fee, E. A. Heller, A. P. Paulson and
N. A. Searl of the police morals squad.
The hearing will be resumed this
morning at 9.
The substance of the testimony of
Mr. and Mrs. Nejepinsky was that on
the evening of July 19, about 10:30.
the officers entered their home and
ransacked the j4lace and treated Mr.
Nejepinsky roughly liofore showing a
warrant. The complainants testified
that the officers found no liquor nor
articles for the manufacture of liquor,
nor did they make any arrests.
The feature of the hearing thus far
Was a statement by Nejepinsky, and
substantiated by Frank .1. Swoboda,
Fifteenth and AVilltam street, that
after the search of the Nejepinsky
home Swoboda brought a message
from Police Commissioner Butler stat
ing that the house that was to have
been searched was 141714 South Sixth
street, instead of the same number
on South Sixteenth street; that a mis
take had been made that Mr? Butler
was sorry it occurred.
A^rs. Nejepinsky, during her testi
mony, stated that Officer Heller was
the only "gentleman" of the four offi
cers who visited her home. She
Imagine a fortune of
$580,000 in a match :
box tossed into a '
gutter! The fortune
was in pearls which
ScotlandYard re
covered. Sir Basil
Thomson, chief of
the C.I.D., unravels
the mystery in a true
detective story, “The
Great Pearl Rob
bery.”
In OCTOBER
(Ssinopolitan
at all news stands
\ I
OWN A VICTROLA
The Brandeis Way
Join Our Victrola
CLUB NOW---TODAY
You Pay Nothing Down
Just Purchase a few records of your
own choice and The Victrola you
choose will he delivered to your
home at once.
■ ■
The model you choose is
merely a matter of taste.
Whatever style you se
lect, the Victrola, with
nil the prcstifje and
known perfomance that
celebrated name stands
for, is the SAFE choice
for lasting satisfaction.
Consult with us imme- !
diately.
1
Sew Model
No. 210
Price
100.00
\
Start Paying on Your
Phonograph in 30 Days
Terms as Low as 5.00 ;i Month
Select Your Victrola from Omaha’s
Largest and Most Complete Stock
. Phonograph Dept.
! Main Floor—West
pointed to Sergeant Fee as the man
who read the warrant and told her to
shut her mouth when she asked if her
name was on the document.
"They finished searching the house
.before they would read a warrant,"
Mrs. Nejepinsky said. "They had a
little rough house before they real
the warrant. They even went into
(he bedroom of my children and dis
turbed them. They told me they had
the goods on us."
Mr. Nejepinsky testified that after
the search had been made one of
the officers on his front porch urged
him not to do anything about the
matter because Sergeant Fee, then
head of the squad, was "a nice fel
low.”
Bee AVant Ads produce results.
Emancipation Day
Is Observed
More than G.ouo colored Omahans
celebrated Emancipation day Monday
at Krug park. The park was crowd
ed with a happy throng.
Governor Charles VV. Bryan, Mayor
James C. Dahlman, Rev. W. C. Wil
liams, Rev. J. C. Burkhart, W. 8.
Jardlne and John T. Adams spoke
in the ballroom in the afternoon.
Governor Bryan in his speech empha
sized the necessity of fairness in the
administration of the law, regardless
of race. He went on to advise that
advantage be taken of the educational
facilities available. He said this is
the first time that he had ever lived
in a Mouse owned by more than 1,000,
000 people and as they all had af
equal share of It, nil he could saj
was that they should come in to s-s
him whenever they were in Lincoln
A dance for the benefit of the OI4
Peoples home took place In the bat)
room In the evening.
Girl Is Caught.
Gertrude Mae Spalding, step dauglv
ter of Albert King. 2516 Pierce street,
was taken off a train at Cedar Rap
ids, a., Tuesday on her way to Chi
cago.
Mr. King will leave for Cedar Ra|>
id» to bring her hack to Omaha. H*
said the girl had no reason to leavs
home and was unable to say where
she got the money for train fare.
To Delicious full cream caramels, some with _ _
W eanesaay IS nuts, at a price that is considerably less ^ ,
than that which we ask on other days. j
I Parampl TTaV Wednesday they will be sold at only, per J j
k OdldlllCi JL'aj pound, Main Floor—West J
Furniture Specials for Wednesday !
We list just a few of the hundreds of values to be had during this week of
clearance. All fine furniture; many odd pieces left from the August sale at
even greater reductions. You may buy if you wish on
On Our Easy Time Payment Plan
18 Genuine “Coxwell” Chairs
The old English lounging chair with deep
coil springs in both seat and back. Only
the best tempered steel wire used in the
spring construction. All nana tiea. run
webbing seat and back. A F* AA
^Choice of velour or ta
f Pestry.
Ottman
Leg Rest !
To match '‘Cox
well” chair, each—
14.50
21.50 Simmon's All Square
Tubing Steel Bed
Continuous post bed with heavy
filling rods; finished in American
walnut. One of Simmons’s best
quality d e a s. r uuy
guaranteed by t h e
maker and the Brandeis
“i coo
sizes.
22.50 “Supreme”
Mattress
15.00 i
50 pounds, e!1 select
layer cotton felt. With
full roll and three extra
rows of side stitching.
FNGLANIlFR rhe Original “One Motion”
ISEchXS Couch Bed 1975
Sjjk o«venth Moor
With one motion this comfort
able couch is quickly converted . j
into a double bed. The frame is
in French gray. The all-cotton
mattress is covered in a good
grade of fancv cretonne.
|
We alto feature other Englander Double
Da-Bede. Wednesday, 39.75^
Wednesday Rugs and Floor Coverings
At September Sale Prices
Buy Them On Our Easy
Time Payment Plan
9x12 Axminster Rug
At iust 25rc off the regular price. Every one is
a selected pattern, every one is seam- ^ OS()
less, some are slightly imperfect, but
imperfections are scarcely noticeable. (J
39.00 9x12 Wilton Velvet OQ AC
Rugs—E very one seamless,
32.50 6x9 Axminster Rugs— O/* C A
Many choice patterns,
23.50 9x12 Wool and Fiber 1 C *7C
Rugs— Colors blue and tan,
125.00 9x12 Worsted Wil- 111 CA
ton Rugs—Extra choice. lll.JU
44.00 11-3x12 Seamless Brus- Oi CA
sels Rugs—Light shades,
39.50 6x9 Super Wilton Velvet Rugs—
Seamless and QO PA
fringed. Jl.DU
54.00 8*3x10-6 Seamless Velvet J 1 CA‘
Rug»—Slightly imperfect, 41.DU
5.00 27x54 Axminster Rugs— O QP
J Extra close weave, D«*rD |
2.00 27x54 Rag Rug*— Mixed 1 A A Jj
centers, striped borders, i.UU
5i*th rloor — Wc»t
Wednesday—2000 Pairs of
Ruffled Curtains
Of Marquisette--Voile--Fancy Scrims
In Four Low Priced Croups
98c - 1.69 - 1.98 - 2.49
All made of an excellent quality, in white: ruffled tie-backs
to match. 21 v yards long; your choice of plain or fancy
dots and designs. Very much underpriced for this selling.
Sixth Floor—Eoxt
R ecords
Now on Sale at
At About 10% Off Regular Prices
75c Records 69C
1.00 Records §9c
1,50 Records 1 OQ
now 1
2.00 Records 1
now i. I «J
rhonograph Pcpirlmrnt Main I !oor Wnl
Brumwick Royal* Colonials
Consols Tvidor ^ ork*
St»*lfor»l
At 10'« Off