The Omaha Sunday Bee PART TWOr EDITORIAL PAGES OITE TO SIX PART TWO MAGAZINE PAGES OJTE TO SIX L VOL. XLV-NO. 21. OMAIIA, SUNDAY MOKNIXO, NOVEMBER 7,. 191$. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. 7 inis Judge Though Handling Over $10,000,000 of Other Peopl e's Wealth in His Job, T..j " r i juuge vrawiora is Cheerful, Contented and is Not Looking for Anything Else By A. R. GROH. D ID YOU ever see a contented man, gentle reader? No? Then gaze upon the features of Bryce Crawford, Judge of the county court for Douglas county, for his Is con tented. , "I am satisfied with my Job," he says. "I want to hang onto It as long as I can. I think It is as big a Job as I can fill." Not only contented, you see, but "not puffed up, aunteth not himself.". Allowing, or the sake of argument, that it is as tig a job as he can fill, he has filled it for two terms overflowing. Though the volume of business ncreased by one-third, Bryce Crawford has dis pensed justice with a hand at once Just nd en ergetic. A well-known "law's delay" was given a swift punch in its loggy old carcass when Bryce Craw ford imported businesslike methods from the police court to the more august county court. Attorneys soon found that there were ways of bearing cases besides the long-winded ways in which each lawyer seemed to try to outdo his opponent in the amount of verbiage he could add to the record. The new Judge didn't drowse over their oratory. He pinned them down to cases. He asked one side what con cessions it could make and he asked the other side vhat concessions Jt would make, thus, shortening the trials both in time and expense and not Inter fering with Justice, but only facilitating it i ThatOa but-one count on which Judge Crawford and his methods move the cumbersome and en cumbered machinery of the county court to grind faster, and even finer. i He works hard; he has the co-operation of his cfflce force and runs things on a scientific and efficient system all the way through. The county court is a busy place. People must call there at two out of the three most important events in life marriage and death before the former and after the latter if there is an estate to be settled. Since Judge Crawford has been In charge 1,796 estates have been settled in the court, aggregating amount well over 110,000,000 and varying in ,ze from one estate of over $1,000,000 to estates with a few hundred dollars in savings accounts. He has appointed guardians for 798 persons laving property varying from 11,600,000 down to a few dollars each. Besides this, 2,698 civil cases have come Into the court. . He has. collected over $67,000 In Inheritance taxes. One estate paid $14,816. Another paid $9,903.24 and the rest were for considerably smaller amounts. ' To 9,390 couples he has issued licenses to wed rnd live happily ever afterward, if possible. He also holds preliminary hearings on crimes com mitted in the county, but outside of Omaha. The earning of the court paid all salaries and expenses and yielded more than '$7,000 besides, which went to the county treasury. This was the largest surplus ever returned by the office. "It was due," this modest Judge hastens to add, ' entirely to the increase in the business of the office." To look at Judge Crawford, good people, you'd rever in the world think he was a Judge. Remem ber how Friend Shakespeare painted the judge in his famous '"Seven Ages of Man:" And then the Judge Tn fair round belly, with good capon lined. With eyes severe and beard of fornzT cut. run ui wiser Bama aiiu uiuuoru luvutaces. And bo he plays his part. Judge Crawford doesn't answer to a single one of these characteristics. His figure is rather small and slender. His eyes are not severe, but blue and friendly. Hla beard is not of formal cut or of any cut at all for he is clean shaven. He is not full of vise saws and modern instances. He is full of stories and modern Jokes and he likes to tell 'em and make people laugh, and be usually tells 'em well, too, even if he is a Scotch nan by descent on both sides of the house. He is a good conversationalist and a good lis tener. He has the rare quality of making the per ton with whom he is talking feel that be is inter ested sympathetically in his affairs. He believes there is a time for laughter and a time for tears. The Judge might wear a long-tailed coat as a sort of badge of bis judicial dignity. But he doesn't. Ordinary sack suit Just like other men .ear is good enough for him. He couldn't decide rases better in a long-tailed coat than in a sack coat. Therefore why the long-tailed variety? Unassuming and genuine are adjectives hon estly bestowed here. He treats the employes of his cfflce as equals. He fixes no Argus eyes upon them. He doesn't bring them no "on the caroet." e simply expects them to do their work. And they do it. And when he hears a good story (or vhat a man with a Scotch sense of humor thinks is good story) he tells It to the boys la his office. va 'rf&fkyj vq; :. --r vAi -t, 11 fT ' :-.:iv, v-.-. v, "... J r-J. - , :: f-n I ' ' -' 3ryze Crawford I Ask Wilson to GREAT hopes are held in San Francisco that President Wilson and his bride will be able to visit the exposition. Indeed, the' president has , already given assurance to the special commission sent to present the Invitation that be will do so if he possibly can. This commission, headed by Mrs. Oalllard Stoney, secretary of the Women's board of the ex position, accompanied by the Misses Esther Bull, Altha McEwen and Dorothy Starr, presented to President Wilson a monster roll of names of many thousands of Callfornians, Including those of the school children of California,- Inviting President Wilson to visit the exposition. The president was delighted at the spirit shown, and with the gift so tnougbtrully prepared, and said that it was earnest wish to be able to visit the exposition. his Hope for the president's visit has by no means been abandoned, and it is thought that if Mr. Wil son does not visit the exposition before its close on December 4,' he may be able to pay the visit during the Christmas holidays, in which event, it is pointed out, that, the exposition would be reopened during the period of the president's visit. The step would permit the fulfillment of a long expressed wish of the chief executive to see the fair as a part of a Journey to the west. While In San Francisco Thomas A. Edison and Henry Ford were so Impressed with the earnest ness with which the exposition officials and San Franciscans are looking forward to a visit from Mr. Wilson that they sent the president a telegram urging that he accede to the invitation of the Cal lfornians. As an Important exposition official said, tiirornia does not wish to be importunate In urging the president to visit the eoast. hut now that the stress of his position has somewhat re- lazed, his visit would be esteemed as the greatest possible distinction that could be conferred upon the people of the west at this time, and an appre ciated recognition of the deep interest which it Is realized that President Wilson feels In the exposi tion. Should President Wilson and his bride visit San Francisco, they would undoubtedly make their headquarters in the New Jersey State building, which was built with the presidential visit In mind, and Is equipped with a presidential suite. Ths buldlng reproduces the famed Trenton Barracks, and is delightfully situated in the central portion of the section devoted to the state and national pavilions. akes Charge of All Dea g . J-is..??-J KiX , i 'J i. :! ;- r i wa few Jersey D . " t ZuamQ , reproducing trie Trenton Ssrracks Ay W e7tiippe wt'M rres- J tJeniia Suite. Brin W 8 . Men's Bride to "erf,. - : .V ' ' : m-t ,, ; i : AO I V Teleot&m Senf Oy I nomas a. Ed 'son axtfeny 4fm villi- Jai'a rotd usff n?y identW.lso fc r visit enerjtron A is Aoneymoon n Property Xvil, wouldn't you stretch a point to laugh at your bobs' " story t Though he gets through with a great amount of work, he has that faculty possessed by most great accomplishes of appearing to have nothing to do. Calm and deliberate, his movements are never hur ried. But all the time he is going straight to the objective point by the shortest route. Let us see If that poor, overworked word is too tired to appear here. No, it can appeai "efficiency." Judge Crawford was "raised" in Omaha, He Has living with his parents in Kansas City when le decided to investigate the works of Blackstone rt al. So he went to the University of Kansas, where he slaked his thirst at the legal fountain for several years and was admitted to the bar in 1892. He began to practice law In Omaha. After sev eral years he became Interested in politics and ran for police Judge. He was "yoTi honah" and "Jedge" for five years and then it occurred to him that he vould be a mighty good man for the people to have up In the county court. He mentioned this convic tion to the people and they elected him by a hand some majority. In fact, he ran far ahead of his ticket. So thore he Is, contented with his "Job," ex ecuting it well; and the people contented with htm. He's moving the wheels of Justice and giving no chance for such cases as that told of la the old poem: For sixteen years the cam was spun, And then stood where It first begun. "Flat Justltla, mat eoelum." A bit of Latin doesn't go bad In a writeup of a lawyer, eh? Ills favorite pastimes are smoking and playing Colt. He says he smokes too much and smokes "anything that'll burn." As for golf, he goes twice a week out to the Happy Hollow links. He can go around in 96, which entitles him to membership In the "dub class." He is decidedly a home man and spends most of his time at this "club" with his wife and two sons. He helps the boys to get their young ideas to shooting, for they are in the high school. They're foot ball players, too. His daughter Is in the state university, and we have her happy father's word for it that "she - is of the yellow-haired, pink cheeked kind that the boys like." Bo he fears she won't get to teach French, In which she is special izing. By the way, the Judge is the sixth of his name In the generations of hit family; and he has a son, Bryce Crawford, the seventh. Hello, who's this putting his head in at the door of the Judge's private office. Oh, It's Joe Sherry, file clerk. "All right, Joe, I'll be with you In one minute," says the Judge. Joe 8herry Is the proud possessor of an auto mobile. Most people admit they're automobiles, anyway. Tee, It's a Ford. And every noon Joe takes the Judge home In his machine to lunch be cause Joe lives within a couple of blocks of Judge Crawford. After they're both lunched he calls tor him and takes him back again. 'Frisco Fair - .-. it i .- UNION TER. "TV I . 4 .W (it tut Ins ApftTim 6JrfifC 25 ft I I : -t ' ' J, ... :z --''x