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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1924)
:r: THE OMAHA MORNING BEE a„ YQT fro -I nr titered Second-CI«m Matter May 28. IMS..gt OMAHA, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1924. * Outildi * thi Vth^iiM^tVvJar/^Oitlj5 •nV"suUiV/5$l2*,!Suadt* enly.° W 1^0 (_ LN l^S Ft** cente ileewhere VUL. OO INU. I/O. Omaha P. 0. Under Act ef March I. 187ft. _’__________ . PEACE PLAN i IRGES HELP FOR LEAGUE 18 Frozen to Death in C h i e a g o Coldest Weather in Years Ex acts Heavy loll—Entire Country Is Hit by Cold Wave. 3 Children Are Victims By I til verbal Service. Chicago, Jan. *».—Eighteen lives was the toll exacted by the • "blest weather Chicago has known in many ■■■', records showed today. er dropping to 13 degrees below zero at 2 this morning, the temper ature moderated. Tonight it was 20 above in Chicago. The extreme cold dipped down into the southwest, bringing zero weather in Kentucky and Tennessee and near zero to Georgia and Alabama. In Florida tonight, the cold was extend !ng down into the orange grove coun try and fashionable winter resftrts were expected to have near freezing weather. At Pensacola, Fla., it was only 7 above zero. The upper Mississippi river was frozen solid with ice and great ti.elds ice were floating as far south as St. Louis, where the temperature had i cached 8 degrees below zero, b e formed in the Ohio river, but the stream was not frozen over. Floods Cause Damage. Floods caused damage in the Ohio and Tennessee river valleys. Trains from the south were delayed by floods and the intense cold. New York and the Atlantic sea board felt the cold today. At New York it was only R above zero at 4 this morning. The temperature rose during the day. In northern New York nnd the New England states, zero weather was reported. Heavy property damage resulted from the extreme cold In Chicago More than 400 fires were reported, mostly In apartments and cottages. Basements were flooded by bursting water pipes and SOS calls w,-re sent to plumbing establishments all day. Hundreds of homeless men were , ared for last night and today in po station, punlic buildings and pri homes. Many of them were picked up by the police from door ways and alleys, where they had sought shelter from the high wind that prevailed throughout the night. Cars Are Cold. Steam roads, elevated and surface lines found it Impossible to keep cars at anything like normal temperature. The street cars were so cold that pas sengers suffered frozen feet and i,antis while making trips of half and t hree-quarters of an hour duration. J Passengers arriving on steam roads complained pullman cars were cold. '1 rains were hours late. F,ig o*flce buildings and hotels found it impossible to maintain com fortable temperatures. I e covered windows throughout the city. Show windows in downtown Chicago were a glare of ice. caused hy the moist air of the interior con densing when it came in contact with the cold glass t Lagoons In Chicago parks were rov med with from a foot to IS inches of ice. But skaters remained away be cause of the bitter cold. Of the 1R who died of freezing in Chicago, nine were reported before midnight last night and nine between midnight and 10 this morning. Three •if the victims were children. In many , ases, the victims crouched in some sheltered corner hoping to rest and escape the biting wind. The cold overcame them and they died without realizing that death was upon them. Hr Associated Press. ^T^.ttsburgh, Pa , Jan. fi —Four deaths attributed to the r'M wave were reported to the coroner's office today. Two persons were frozen lo death during the night and two oth ers, a. child arid an aged man, were fatally burned while dressing in front i if open fires. Xew Oreleans. La., Jan. 8—Three Xew Orleans men died of exposure to ,‘he cold in a skiff in Lake Borgne last night, and their two companions nre in”a serious condition In a hospital hero The cold wave also accounted fm :t fourth death in this vicinity, the hotly of a negro having been found t ■ today in the yard of his home. ’Nebraska Pioneer Dies Table Bock, Xeb., Jan 6.—Mrs. l'.eU 11 Carey Good ridge, who came i i southeast Nerbaska in 1857 with her parents when 10 years old, died t the age "f 7ii. Bhe was the widow ,,f frank J. Goodrldge, who (lied . ton. Her husband freighted with , i nx team between St. Joseph and Denver, when this country was al most entirely unsettled. She Is sur i.od by several children. Four D«*a«l in Fire Peoria, III., Jan. 6.—Four men lost tl,,.|r lives in a fire at Kuttliville, 111., iilv Gils morning, which destroyed rive buildings on the town square. _The Weather 1 ||(cirn cndlnic 7 p tn Taruary * T* inp«*i allire II ikb■ •*f, 37; lowcat. f>; i-in, 11*, normal Total deficiency .1 ;i u.i ry 1, 1 , -ri(tiin(foil, in« 1 -1 and bund r **dt ha: ^ ,i i ,-i'- January 1, ;!! 0". Ui f flcm y, Hourly Tcmpcrat urr*. . n. m. . ... r> f. » in.* , ,i. in.* H ;t. m.1f* •I II III >1 HI ii HI 14 I I a. in.' M i J IIUOD • I p. Ill " : p. n. ......34 3 p. in.37 4 p. Ml. (> p. Mi .3.. li p. Ml. . 3ft 7 p. Ml..35 H p. 1)1. ••••*,35 House Body to Act on Shoals Tuesday Washington. Jan. 6—Prompt ac tion by congress' to sell the govern ment's nitrate and power project at Muscle Shoals, Ala., was forecast to night when it was anounced that the house military affairs committee will meet Tuesday to consider Henry ford’s offer for the property. The majority of the committee in terprets President fooltdge’s remarks with respect to Muscle Shoals in his annual message to congress ns con stituting a virtual endorsement of the ford offer. Bomb Is Hurled at Royal Palace in Tokio. Japan Korean Is Held I or i iffense Which Created Sensation —Three Missiles Fail to Explode. Ily A*.yrt<’lHt#*tl Pres*. Tukio. Jail. 8.—The police, after suppressing last night the Japanese newspapers that publisher! accounts of the unsuccessful bomb throwing at tlie imperial palace yesterday, re leased tlie story today with a formal statement that a Korean had hurled the bombs which failed to explode. The emperor and his family arc nut occupying the palace at present. The Korean threw three bombs. It was said that at the open space, out side the palace, where the bombs were thrown, no damage could have done to the palace. Beyond the police guard, feiv persons were astir in the vicinity. The Korean was arrested immediately. Despite tho fact that the demonstra tion apparently was staged by a Ko rean, public opinion supports tlie tlie ory that he acted as a protest against the attempted formation of a cabinet controlled by the house of peers. Tin incident further embarrassed Premier Kiyoura, who already had stirred up the opposition of the Seiyukai, the majority party in the diet, because of his announced intention to make Baron Fujlmura Ins foreign minis ter and had aroused the ire of the militarists because of his proposed -appointment of General Fukuda as minister of war. General Fukuda for merly was commander-in-chief of Formosa. Bate today, now ever, the new pre mier announced a reorganization of the contemplated c abinet which shift ed Baron Fujimura to the ministry of communications and dropped b>n I eral Fukuda entirely. The bomb throwing, coming So soon after the attack on the prince regent by a young radical, who fired on his automobile, lias caused a tie mendous sensation. This is said to be the first time that Japan has facedj what s* ‘*ms to be an anti imperial' movement. It i.s reported that the Koreans, who are blamed for every untoward incident, are arranging a demonstra tion against the regent to take place just before his wedding, which ha* been set for February 6. Attempt to Bomb Nijiibadii Bridge Fails; Korean Hold By I nlvcrsal Hfrvltf. Tokio, Jan. G.—One Korean was | held today ami police charged so cialistic. and Korean agitators were I behind «n attempt Inst night to blow up tbe Nijubaahl bridge entrance to the Imperial palace. The bomb fail ed to explode. "v * Donor of Peace Prize and Members of Jury of Award mmmmmmmmim smmmm WHI TiOCK. €> . Eltku rr f*rt ^ , Lodge and Borah Clash Expected on Recognition c Leader \\ ill De fend Pnliej on Soviet Pu^ sia—Tax Plans to He Discussed. Wasldngton, Jan. G.~Taxes. prohi bition ami rcc ignition < f the tlussiati soviet government will be the sub jo - is of di.-i1 ll.'-—iun trn.eni-v." in ihe house ami '-n ite, There will be lit tle affirmative m-tien l*v either house, but committee activity i n important legislation thi’ .s t,. i.,mo wdl b - in creased. * Senator l.odge of Mns* ic husetts. the lepnbliyi n 1 "•« :• r ami ■ hnirtnan of tire foreign relations committee, will support the administration's attitude toward the soviet r< ir ie ills pre pared address is exir-cted to precipi tate i n* ■ I disi-n - - b -i with Sena tor Borah, :< publican, Idaho, lending tip* attack on the program i f file administration. May ( ontinue Deadlock. This discussion will delay, if not prevent, balloting in the deadlock over the i halrmansiiip of the Inter state commerce committee. There still are no signs of a break in the tie up ami indications row are that re publican loaders will find It difficult to gain ft majority support for the indefinite shelving of tho contest. SUNNY SIDE UP An unpretentious restaurant on Douglas, below Fourteenth. Con duced on peculiar lints. Husband presides over kitchen and wife looks after the front. Closes at 8 eacli evening. At closing time every em ploye is paid for the day, every other bill for the day is scanned and checks made out for mailing In the morning. Kach new day begins with not a penny of Indebtedness. Patron age growing right along, and it s worth walking several blocks out of the way to get one of this little shop's Juicy T-bone steakes. Policy of Omaha’s big stores iri the matter of Saturday night dos ing Is always a matter of wonder to visitors from the outside district These visitors expect to tee Satur day night the big shopping nl^Jit lri the metropolis, because that is the big night in their homo twous. In conveniences many, but after they think it over It Is all right because they rtslize that the clerks and other employes are entitl' d to the night off Falling to get into the stores After supper I he visitors visit, the show shops. Old burlap sacks In neat demand these days. Ice cutters on farter lake use them to bundle up their feet. Ordinary overshoes ore of lit tle avail ns feet warmers under Ice cutting conditions. Ice cutting provlil ing employment for several hundred men. A brand new flivver truck and car combined disputed the right-of-way with fire apparatus at Farnam and 1'lghteenth. Flivver driver could see hose cart coming for two Mocks and hear Its whistle even farther. Must have thought It was a railroad cross Ing and that ho would beat the en gine lo it. Driver of hose dirt tnnn aged to slow' down and only side swipe flivver, which lost a wheel. I.mIiI awake all night shuddering at the language used toward flivver driver by firemen on the hose < art. However, knowing < Ireumsturu i h I commended language very highly. Until nnd vociferous applause’ An other apartment housw manager an nounces decrease fn tents. Plenty of applause In reserve ?o.- owners' resi dence prop-ity vv-.o vv <1 rll them «*elvr* of th. • «ti"f that tbs first month’* rer ’ si • . Id he ’. 0 per < rnt cf the property a value. Fa mam car crowded w’ot sc than, a sardine • an. Fine f" a dation for • lot c.f mutte. o(l • denunciations of street railway company. Frightfully cold outside and everybody eager to grnb flr»t car th;!t came along. A conduc tor with a sense of humor saved the situation. "(Jet more closely acquaint ed up there: more friends want on,” he snout* d "Do your strap ahnring with a smile. Just a little good na ture and we ll all he home* earlier. Two In* hes forth* ! ahead anti we ll we able to shut the door and get alone. Tough going, hut think what would happen If the cars were not running \ml grouchy passengers began smiling everybody crowded closer to niik* room for other be In ted an I half-frozen passenger*. and the distance home was appreciably shortened. A grouchy conductor would have made a hundred or more growling, snapping passengers. ‘Tough weather to ho walloping the p t\ « tin • is," 1 remarked to the patrolman at the corner of Dougins and Fifteenth "You said it. friend, but thank gnocha - w>* ain’t wadin' In half fto/i u p c-h to nor slmo top* T'nnks; i’ll Mo>>k* it when tic lunch relief comes along " Three >|iuii ter length fur cunt, w ith collar turned tip far enough to hide her bobbed hair. Pair of bright eyes and i nos* slightly purple showing ; between collar and bat brim. SI* inches of chiffon law and then a paii of very low two strap pump* with piper thin ;o|. > And n mere man wonder imw the dear things man a ;■ ■» to * 1 n an • ula and frosted extremil'lf J "l’retly end-l to g>* f*i church to night, bu't it. deal . ' Ycm. suppose we bundle up and go to a movie * May Ijp possible to tbuiae ways and means to put In garden b. radio Mint Look Into the Matter \\ M M 1 W feoV.1 V,VV_ ] Fair and Warmer I 11 i all Mark <»f .'IT Reached Sunday— \o Rain or Snow \\ as Reported. P'cmt.nufcd fair weather, and warm si was prtdh tea t< v Monday, mm the cold wave which had held Omaha and Nebraska in its grip experienced a sudden snap. Warmed by a gentle southwest wind, the mercury, which at 6 stood at 6 a love aero, rose steadily throughout the day. until at 3 in the afternoon i‘ reached itM highest p int of 37 de grees. Prom 5 to ft tie mercurv rose at. the rat* ,-,f one degies an hour, but when It reached 11 degrees it expand ed with increasing rapidity, making jumps of three, four, eight. two. six and thre^* degrees at hourly reading® before It registered 37 deg re* * at 3 It dropped to 36 at 4 and to 35 at 5, where It still dung at 7. It was generally warm throughout tlie state at observation time Sunday morning Temperatures were 16 at North Platte and 20 above a* Valen tine At Sioux Pity the mercury registered 4 above 34 at Denver, 36 at Phoyenn*. 16 shove at Sheridan. Wyo,, and 2 below at. Pander, Wyo. No snow or rain was reported at anv station. liuililinp; in Kearney I xccctls Million Dollar* Kearney, Neb, .Inn. k Kearney's building and Improvement program for th*' last \ e.i * rental' I li'l »\ <»d ed $ 1,000,000. Heventy fom iik.i homes \v« io »**ett ed dining the \»*n» representing an Investment of approximate ly PlTo.OOO. Other building, including two ele vators. an apartment house, and Union Pacific* dep"t and yardage *\ tensions, Mill total |4H0,ona. 1 n nddi tlun the city carried out a paving program which exceeded f2o(».00n None of these figures# includes exfen sums and plant improvement under taken by the pent ml Power company or the Kearney Telephone company, which will ex..1 1100,00a I ire Partly Depot. Htftfrice, Kelt., Jan 0. The pair llngfon dep"l n* H« a seven mil's! northwest of Ite.-itrhe. was threaten • d with destrii'f cm ivlii'M fire started on the platform, destroying part of If Agent All'll and ' fotee of men succeeded ill • . i illgillshing the Ida 7.0 before mtieli damage lesultod Allen and family live in the depot Th** P.oatrhe fire department \u-i called, hut on account of the* ini'one void lid mil respond K.dwflnl M. I First Suicide of ^ ear Is \\ nmau III Health Cau>e of Art. Hti* liaml Declare- Wife ( aim a* She Tells Her Stor\. The fire* sulfkle of iho new oar was reported to poll* •> 3 • -*terday. Mrs. Kdlth Hfrd. .kfferson hotel, committed suieide in 1 • r room hi the hotel yesterday affirm tv swallow 1 Ipk poison. Mrs. r.ild ralndy told her husband | tlmt aim had laker ih p« ? n. when he returned t ■» tl *’ : - 1.. f * . n brief! absence at 2 30 (1 era lit, tl • li'.sl.ai 1 '*.: 1 pal -a that a f*t of despondency must have seized his wife, who was In ill health. nAJCT*. -(oEKERAX' HA7?30RZ> 'll / a/ -re. • ■ Township Officer Takes Own Life Vflt'r \\ orkill:: oil Book' All K\t‘Min<! John tla.-enkainj* Kill- Sell W itli <Inn. H-iiilpr. ,Wi„ Jan 6.—.1"!'.!: Ha*er I kump t«y . his own life 1 » machine shod on ! is farm about a mile north • f he: S >*. : day night at •• 1 Af.er telling his wife that he way going j out to finish his chores, he went tc j the si‘ d v. lo r*? he placed .* sh 'pun in a vin; ami telexed lUg t*iS4i**r ^ rlth a paw • f pliers Heath Wa* irv stontanw:*. II.** IkvJv was found by hts v.;f• - ami a H-*earold son. who were in the home and ran to tbc shed upon heaving thy shot. Hubert K. M*>odie 1 as i *> tif ed . .J f.iun*: t flit oeath resulted ft ‘if infli • ' ■* v ind ue.1 th. a». inquest w .a not neces •j.if * laaetik tiiip whs a township of filial of Iteemer township. lie had spect th* fv«* ..nn w«.rk:i p n the township !* ». };« .Vvoixiing e : ie o«r oner. Har*»ukamp lmd open worrying i aiderr.t '.# dur.np the last 10 days. Might yeai rg, * H.iset.l:amp W'.S struck by hghtitihg while • l hrg horse u»tCK T li h h<*l se NT'S killed aid Hm tuikump suffered a shock to his net v oils syy* -n whici hue affected him from time •<» time since. He *s sot |vlved h\ ha parents. *. id- .v t . <! tw.. sot.s. all of 1 teenier. St. Louis Business Section Has Big hie S i . s .7a.• r.—Darn age *n e\ of $ • w.m l aus’Mj bv a fir* in the business section ».lr!\ today The flartm* gutted the four story building on opted by the Day Rubber company, the schroeder Tremayne c*om|tfiny and Rhode* Nucford Furnl tun company. damaged • .*» Nugent Ri others de partment store and *ev e:nJ otbe- budding* in ih«- vicinity of ihuadvay. Sc tdiaries ami F* urtli streets. The fire start* d in th» rub ber inmpiii'v plant f a an timbdcr mined ctu*e. Tonight fit emeu still were dir* ;lng sir* in* f vatei on the ruins. High wind and cold weatuer great ly hampered fire fighting operations Expensive Omelet Causes O'Neill Man to Feign IllnesS at Mention of Eggs I tinner I’ros/iectnr itr l p $1,30(1 m "(»olden I' jlfis That \eiidihnr Had Snu^lit for } ears thirteen of Ini—arul Worth $100 ipiece. i Nel».t .I.ii i. Dinosaur eggs nt 110,000 01* $20,000 each have no ntfiac’i in as n . it • of dirt for John Hoilskey of O Neill Mr. Hons key ma p at** the moat expensive meal ever ifeti in « »*!••• ;u|o. an egg omr let worth exactly $1,300, and when he learned the value of Ida repast it made 1dm violently ill. The expensive meal was eaten *a ( number of years ago. when Mr llnrl** key was prospecting in eonipany with I John Is i i .id. I 1 it I «*t ti e Int * Judge Ktnkaid. ami l u’k Sumner, j who tie* government n»*« was the first man ev* r to go through the! (•rand canyon of the t'olorndn in a bout oi otherwise hut which how ever p* another story ilorlwkey had 1 prospect near ones being developed hy Klnkaid nnd Sum ner and In the evenings thpv used to gather around a common « impflre and Npctii'at. about tl.e good times they would have the following win f»‘i which they expected to spend in Denver I .at*, and parti* niarly ham and egg** Was what they intended to indulge in most u I • i they gad t > I »en\ ci One evening after one . f these din • Missions IlnriMov while returning t*» his own camp stumbled across « wild ground bird s nest and tepox.rg therein wore 13 »cgs. which glistened in his lantern's hr;h* ns tie old T»ii * I took her fitght \\ .th tho memory, of the hn;n ntul °gg rota ersatton Mil! fresh In mind Mr l|orisk*v githeted up tho egga in his 1 it and t<'»*k them to Jus < A nip There, candling thorn by the light of tho lantern. h»* learned tliat the\ at ill wet e fresh r• i. 1 tho next morn ing lie broke them ip ami stirred them into an omelet " hi* h he cooked and ate for breakfast. Th n decot Rted with a beatific Mnile, he strolled i ver to hie neighbor'* camp and broke the news that ho hat breakfasted on a fresh egg omelet •'What kind of eggs was they duel led Sumner. who was I « oPe. ter for the Smithsiinian Institution Ptarmigan eggs Thirteen of! them." ‘ Hmph ' Uisgustoulv gi unto,! Sum 1*1 V'»U have .hud « enough to ha\? • pi you in ham and or.g* in l>*t \ 1 ill winter. I’m 10 years I ha\i bad an order front the insti | tilth i f. ptarmigan eggs at $10i> anj egg 1 \ oit have »d 11,300 worth 'j s- which time Mi llortskryi nov* j has cared ft»r even « litcken i * URN j 1 Winner ot Bok Prize Secret Until After Vote; V/orld Court as First Step itliout hull NJimiiher-lii|» in League of Nation- at Present. Program Lull- for Participation in Deliberation- of < onneil ami \--einl>K—ould Prop \rtieles \ and \\ I I rotn Covenant. Winner to Get $50,000; Double Sum if Adopted New York, Jan. 6.—Join the world court. Join in the work of the league of nations, with reservations. This is the substance qf the Bok program for world peace an nounced today. The name of the author of the accepted plan is not announced and will not be until the completion of the ref erendum vote of the American people, early in February, until that time the plan will be known simply as number 1469. It may be that the author is a man, it may be a wo man. The reservations proposed so nearly parallel the Lodge I reservations, it is conceivable that Senator Lodge himself might be the author of the Bok peace plan. The nation-wide referendum will be conducted through the newspapers particularly but in addition ballot boxes will be set up in hotels, libraries, clubs, and in other places where the largest possible number of persons can'be reach ed. It is hoped by Mr. Bok that votes for or against the plan will be cast by a sufficient number to obtain an ex pression of opinion that can be considered nationally repre sentative in its scope. Hiram Johnson Opposes \rins Sale to Mexico Candidate for Pre*ident Do rian- Poliry Intolerable From the Moral stand point. tt\ \ a i rt 1 I'rp** Chicago, Jan. 6.—The policy adopt* , by the administration in its dealing*! with Mexico is *tnto!ei ihle from th* a oral standpoint and repugnant to spl : c.f IJe-ttv old the r'gfim <yf peoples.' Senator Hiram Johnson, candidate f..r the republican ivmina t on for president, dec-lured tonight at his national headquarters here. Senator Johnson returned here Frlduv niKht from (levmand. whete I lie opened h,s campaign f- r Ohio president haa teen laving plane with his manager* for a nation*! speaking tour ' The lucky enunciated by our government is at variance w.th what has leei: the light to Is- fundamental with us," 1 r asserted. "It is ro w of ficially declared that tlie United State* win aid ami maintain coi sti luted authority, will preserve the status quo cbt t s hemisphere, "Clui- nation tn advance take* its ’ I i-aitiou against nt.j and all revolu tions no matter what the merits, and i ■ind'O takes with its m V. y power to sustain as g lust rebellion or revolu .'in nv • \ •• ,r, r g-n-evn: • of I whatever characte. "It any such idle had obtained Jur ing our own revolution, tlie I'n.red i States would still la- a deie-lldem y of , (treat lirilain Heyond lb s. it neg.i t.Ves all cur protestations of pemc and at once makes us indirectly a paid f little 1. 1 wa s Leonard Wood Favors Wear Investigation lit \**n. iAti>d I’ff* Ma-v.'u .'in -1 Ms iss r.*r »• resolution inti *il i* *‘d ’■> I h-present! tii e Firm . *.rlu* all® . « onpres-, sional inqulo into h * ndmir.sstra tion, Governor I^onird Wood to day declared he wou’d welcome such; in nvest ttU'ii !! * ] •' ol :■ c l hope they’ll hew *o the line and let the chip* fall where they may.” General Wood denied that any of til* staff had investment* In the Philippine* with the exception of one con»tabu!ar!y officer, who owned a few share* .n n *u* tr pUnt.it. : Room‘m*!| Memorial. Tori Ian v at • lore ftooseveJt as a rouph ia de ! signed from life by Jam** Kariej Fraser will be erected on the ’;*oule I \ard iiinntnp f om SnnHapa t«> San | .luan hill. . •, ioinNT.cn with the fifth! nnni'ei>ar> «/ l la fminer pr* " d- nt s or at ii Ti.* i n - c, eptco is 'he '.' a’ ! iui.j4 selection of the jury of award, i f which Elihu Root is the chalrmai The Ju y of award is nonpartisan. Months of painstaking labor have bee . given to the re.ilmp of 'he 22.2 C. J,n- - ■< and 'he work e'-uvi* i* i monument to the cause of world P‘ ■ ■' » I .id on Munition bilkers. A fir-reaching hop9 is npr(-.<« Lrtnan I: ®t on it half of II jury of award that the first fruit ot the plan selected will be genera prohibition of the manufacture ar sale of all materials of war Edward W. Bok, author of the scheme to secure a world peace pro pogal. acceptable to the American !>e pie in presenting the results of the plan calls attention to the deep-seatev desire for world peace as evidence* iv lli-. \ arioim proposals submitter, the keyncda of them aJ! being that •'the United ?*ates take the lead In a common agreement to brand war ti tery truth, an outlaw " To lie Tut I p to Cmigrc... To the authi r of the accepted pl-i At r l,«k will pay JiO.OWi upon the putJli .iion of the author's name, and mother ?»*'>.GOO if anJ "hen the plan is adopted t-y the president and off. ei.illy c ncuire! in by the senate The report . f the jury of award is as foil "*: * The jury of award re al;? « ti„it there is no nne approach i world pence, and that it is net.' «iry to n er. ’« not merely politico1 but ale. peychologlCTil and economic factors. The only possible pathway to international agreement with ref erence to those complicated and dif fk-ult factors is through mutual ccu:>’ sel and • i-operation which the plan sel* i-u contemplates. It ve there fore the unanimous opini. n c-f the jtiiv that of the 22 1 t5a plans submit ted, plan number is the best practicable plan by which the fnited States may cooperate with other pa tiers to achi. ve and preserve the peace of the world,’ It lhi - • f t - • jury that the first frrit of the mutual •• '■: .. ro-operation among th* nations which will result fr, ni the adoption of tee t ' n selected will N a general prohibition of the manufs ■ ll. i- ind sal. of a materials of sc •fhhu Ro- t chairman .tames Gut’i ru Hartford. lei" rd M House. Eiien Fit- Pendleton. Roscoe Pound. Wail i. Mil n v o- it „■ tv lock ' Views of Mr. Itch In i Alimenting upon the many plans which were submitted, and in present*!!? the plan adopted by the jury «>f award. Mr. Bok said The jury had before '.t an Index of the true feeling and judgment of hundreds of thousands of American citizens The plans came from everj group n American life Some wet a '*bvious!> f cm life-long students of history and international law Some w« re from lvrsous who have studied little hut who i *.'«e themselv. s peer and felt the horror of war—or wh«» . re **x en now living rut its traged) H.wtxur >.nl ke. thex almost a express or imply tin same conx a lion Th.«i ;hi* .s the time for the iTum to I'mo Vhrvf, ( oitimn On#a Clip This Ballot, Mark It and Send Your Vote to The Bee 1 m Pi AN IN BRIEf P,. .po«M i I. That the I'nited SUtr« abn I inv. «* diateK enter the Permanent t'ourt of In ternational Justice, unde: t' e c. odition* fated hy ijeerefarv li nho a I'd T • - •lent Hardin? in K* l-uar\ 19 II That without becoming a member c. th. It*, cue »d • at ion * a« at pr«’*pr» on at it tit ed. the I'nited State* shall offer to j evtend if* present eo-opera! ion with t h< league and participate in the work of t^, league a* a ho Iv of mu ai eour-o! under conditions which 1 Substitute nio-a force a - p ' opinion for the rniSrurv n ec. roiv • f e trie ilia in ' r t i \ an.; \\ I s ai eg nard % he M ■ . e d. * * - V1 cp|»t the tact 11-a* ! e i ’ led S a Will assume no oh'ig.t'io- » utidet t '■ ':»*»!» of \ u P*. r, Iin act pong res • T? i»po r 11 a! men ! »• t s h ip . ,i ,e should be opened t.» a • a... i»% l*twid# for the continuing tie i ■< . p toeut 01 international ia" The Omaha Morning Bee The Evening Bee OmNeb. Do > .'.i • p prove th » Y , - pi a • . \ \ \ .ir At' \ .\t w♦ p • K'% ' Xair.o Add i i 'N Cit> Sittl o Vrc v ou a \ otv ' , , ..