THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. JUNE 13. W. RailStrikcMay , . Be Directed From Offices in Canada Move Would Be Made to Evade? Recent Supreme Court Decision Holding Unioni for Property Damage. . Chicago. Tune 12 While addi tional wage cult swung over the heads of 350,000 more railway env nlove and awaited only iormal re lease bv the railroad labor board to tla.h another $40,000,000 from the pay roll of the carriers, it vvas rumored today that any rail strike growing out of present threats may be directed and financed irom Can ida as a nirans of evading the recent decision of the United States su preme court holding unions liable for carnages caused by treir members. Viewed Legitimate. Leaders of the rail unions said to be contemplating the move viewed the establishment of Canadian head quarters as legitimate in view of conditions caused by the supreme court opinion, because the unions are international organizations. Final penalties in case of a walkout could thus be averted, it was said. It was expected the new wage re duction order will increase the total cut from railway workers' wages to approximately $150,000,000 a year. Clerks, signal men, stationary fire men, oilers and marine department employes will join the shopmen and maintenance of way employes as victims of the slash. . Wiener Man Named to Head Swine Breeders Association Norfolk, Neb., June 12. (Special Telegram.) The Nebraska Hamp shire Breeders' association was reor ganized here when half a hundred swine producers held an interesting session. Livestock growers from western, eastern and southern parts ot tne state were present. William Gross of Wisner was elected president; E. B. Morris of Clearwater, vice president; Q. D. Dauphin, Tilden, secretary-treasurer. These officers are also members of the board of directors, which in cludes in its membership E. P. Sul livan of Oakdale, C P. Paulson of Nora, E. E. Johnson of Genoa and John Volk of Battle Creek. , McCook Swimmer Killed by Contact With Power Line McCook, Neb., June 12. (Special Telegram.) Lawrence Clayton, 23, of McCook was killed when he came in contact with the power line of the McCoobr Electric company, about two miles south of McCook, at a point where the line crosses the Re publican river. . . Darrel Lytic and Charlie Beard were both burned and shocked but escaped death. Clayton was attempt ing to- fescue Lytle from the wire. The secret of goodness You know how good Heinz Pickles and Sauces and Relishes are. ' Heinz Vinegar is one of the quality ingredients that make them so good. Sold .everywhere! Four kinds Malt, Cider, White and Tarragon. In Heinz sealed bottles. PURE VINEGARS HEINZ SYRUP PEPSIN IN OLD AGE Much used by elderly peoplfteonstiiMtion, bSiomneai, baad. aushetv etc . aawaaaaaaaaaj men and worn em. at they crow older, suffer constantly from little ills. The cause Is the poisons produced by chronic constipation, result ins in headaches, depression, bloating; sour stomach, bad breath, etc. A single bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin will prove to you that you can so regulate yourself that elimi nation win occur promptly very day. Increased doses are not necessary. It is a com bination of Egyptian Senna and otaersiinple laxative herbs with pepsin. The cost is only about a sent a dose. fa spite of the fact Oat Dr. wMweu s syrup repeat been on the market W j yaara They Play r - - 3 mml The West sisters, string quartet, entertained for radio fans who listened which was broadcast from the Omaha Grain exchange at 8:15. Gen. Chang Renews Fierce Fighting Against Gen. Wu t aaaaaaaBaaaaaaa- Armistice Only Ruse Li Yuan-Hung Accepts Presi dency To Abolish Mili tary Governors. , Lnndnn. Tune 12. The armv of Sun Yat Sen, southern Chinese leader, has. captured Kanchow Ki, in Kiafffcii nrnvinre. arrorHinir to a.' Hong Kong dispatch to the Daily Mail. The fall of the city was pre ceded by several days of severe fight ing. Tientsin, China, June 12. (By A. P.) Gen. Chang Tso-Lin's propo sals for an armistice with Wu Pei-Fu appear to have been simply a ruse to gain time for the defeated Manchuria war lord. Heavy fighting broke out fnday between ihinwangtao ana Shanhaikwan. The battle has been raging for the past three days. Pekin. Tune 12. (By A. P.) China, after 10 days virtually without an executive head functioning - ill Pekin, again has a president and the nucleus of a cabinet. - Moreover, if indications are borne out, the two will have a fair share of support from the south China section, whose oppo sition to the old government has done much, if not most, to keep alive civil war for the past five years. Li Yuan-Hung, who was president until the monarchial coup of 1917 forced. him from office, again is in power. He came to Pekin yesterday and resumed office, and his first of ficial act was to nominate Dr. Wu Ting-Fang, former minister at Wash ington,-to be his premier. It is un derstood that Dr. Wu had consented t,o accept this office before Li left his Retirement, in Tientsin ' to 1 re-enter again' the "'turbulent -theater in Chinese politicaal life. t " Power t 'Carjtbn., r; Dr. Wu has been 'a' power in the Canton government since that admin istration arose as a protest over the very circumstances 'which ousted Li, and his adhesion to the new execu tive, if confirmed, is likely to do much toward solidifying the country in its support. ' Li comes at the behest of many members of the old parliament -which he dessolved in 1917, and at the urgent appeal of Wu Pei-Fu, , dom inant military leader of China. He was reluctant to come and stood out for more than a week against the almost frantic pleas of leaders in the movement for a unified China that he reclaim his office. ' As assets of his new venture he may count on the solid support of Wu Pei-Fu, the good will and con fidence, of a large proportion of the former parliament,' now reassembling and re-establishing itself as at least the temporary representative of the people, and a more nearly complete suppression of banditry than has been the case in many years.' This last laVgely is due to Wu Pei-Fu's ener getic campaigns, particularly that against Chang Tso-Lin, the Man churian war lord who recently sued for an armistice. '-. Sun May Fight. As liabilities he may count upon the open opposition of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, president of the South China government, and so many of the old parliament members as Dr. Sun has been able to induce to support him. Dr.. Sun, too, has a good force of troops in the field, 1 some estimates placing their number as high as 150, 000. Dr. Sun has expressed himself as willing to fight for the place at the bead of China's affairs, which he claims as chosen representative of what the Canton proponents declare is the only constitutional govern ment in China. General Wu has de clared that Dr. Sun's military op erations will avail nothing., however. land has decried Sun himself as la- and is today the largest selling liquid laxative in the world, the formula has never been im . proved upon. It is safer and better for yon than salts, minerals, calomel, coal tar and such drastic purgatives. i . : Hatfnnce Bottle Free jy.yfr.rwi.,a!s , for The Bee Radio Fans boring under the delusion that he is divinely appointed to lead China out of her sufferings. To Eliminate Tuchuns. It is believed that President Li's first effort after he has put his gov ernment into working order will be the elimination of the system of tuchuns or military provincial gov ernors. He originally made it a con dition precedent to his acceptance of the presidency that these officials should withdraw from office or at least refrain from 'meddling with civil governmental matters. The system has been credited by many students of Chinese affairs with the generation of many civil conflicts, since each tuchun. virtually is a mili tary dictator with armed forces be yond the control of the central gov ernment. ; .- v ,"i Hurricane Results inv ' 60 Deaths in New York (Continued from Fata Oaa.) The rescue work started immediately, but darkness and the panic-stricken crowds, hindered the labors of the volunteer life savers. - Property damage estimated at from $1,000,000 to . several times that amount was done by the tornado. Tempest Breaks'. The storm followed a day of in tense heat and was as sudden as it was violent. It was preceded by an hour of dead calm, while ominous blue-black clouds piled up above the western horizon. Then came the tempest, accompanied by the roar of thunder and flashes of lightning. Frail buildings were crushed by the mighty weight of the wind; elec tric wires were drn away and in the darkness and torrential rains the rescuers could do little until the storm had subsided. Hysterical men and women, tearing blindly . at the wreckage, hindered rather than helped the workers engaged in lifting ruins, of the wheel. Huge trees in Central park were uprooted and tossed across the driveways. ; .i-r:--r-'.--" Five peopje .were hurt when the wind blew out great plate glass fronts of stores along Broadway and scattered haberdashery and clothing along the" street. " . In Brooklyn lightning struck., a street car and knocked six passen gers unconscious. " Hits Great rVhiti Way, Electric signs along the Great White Way seemed special targets of the cyclonic wind, A huge sign ex-, tolling the virtues of an automobile tire was torn .loose from its moor ings, topped Over onto a skylight, carried a smaller ,ign with jt in its plunge and started a fire from dis connected wiring Ferris Wheel Wrecked. Death' tame lit, unexpected ways. A SO foot high ferris wheel in the Classon Point amusement park, abutting into -Long Island sound, collapsed when it was struck by a heavy bolt of lightning just as the storm broke over that section. -The revolving wheel. was crowded with more than 60 women and children. Five women'-'and' : a-Ttine-year-ofd girl were crushed to death beneath the mass of twisted steel girders and heavy timbers and. the others were dragged from under the pile of deb ris by rescuers, who dug into the wreckage in the: face of the intense wind, and a heavy, blinding down pour of hail that shortly turned to rain. Eleven of the resc'ued Were se riously injured and sent, to hospitals. Several cannot -recover.- The thousands of -persons at the resort were thrown into a panic that was quieted only when 200 reserves atrived from Bronx police stations. ' Two Crushed by Tree.. . At Red Lion inn on Boston post road, near Mamaroneck,' New York, a woman and her 7-year-cJd' daugh ter were killed at the table when a tree, blown down by the storm, crashed through : the roof,- carrying down with it a brick chimney. Trees blown down killed a man an4 his 10-year-old son in Mt. Ver non, N. Y., a mother and infant -in a doorway at -New Rochelle, a young man in his automobile at Oyster Bay, and a woman in an automobile near Hackensack, N. J. : ; " Simmons Murder Trial, Scheduled for Early Date Butte, Neb.,' June 12.-i-(Special Telegram.) Walter Simmons, charged with the murder of Frank Pahl, Spencer (Neb.) automobile dealer, was brought here today and bound over to the district court for trial. An early trial at a special term is scheduled. There was no repetition of mob violence when Simmons was brought to Butte on this occasion. He has been held in the Lincoln state prison for safe keeping. Dances-in School Buildings ' - O. K., Supreme Court Rules ' Lincoln. Tnne 12 Atlmcino-' AnrL I ing parties in the high, school build ing was not an abuse or desecration on the part of members of trHPschool board, it was decided today in an opinion handed down by the Nebras ka supreme court today in affirming a- decision 4)f the W-iu-rr rourt ifenvinv in last night on The Bee's concert, Fenton to Blame for Brown Parole Warden Shoulders Responsi bilitySays There Were No Black Marks in Record. Lincoln, June 12. (Special.) "If there is anyone to blame for the re lease of Fred Brown from Jhe pen itentiary it is certain members of the Omaha police force and myself." That was the statement given to newspapers today by Warden W. T. Fenton. "I'm the man who dug Brown up and pushed his parole through," the warden continued. "As for some of this talk that all a convict needs to do in order to get a parole is to make friends with Christian people and ministers, that is "bunk," "There has never been a single church worker who has. taken an in terest in the convicts at this peniten tiary who has asked the board to parole them. They visit the convicts at the penitentiary and have in some instances hunted ' employment for them, when it looked as though the men would get paroles. ' "I became interested in Brown first when I learned of his wife in Omaha suing him for divorce and be lieved an attorney in Omaha was en deavoring to take all of Brown's property away from him. I looked up Brown's prison record and it, was absolutely perfect. There wasn't a single, black mark registered against him. ' ' - - - State Sheriff s Dad ,". Enjoys Man Hunt Lincoln, June 12,r(Special.) Reuben Hyers, .former Cass county Ushetirfv-Nehraska; ceaitentiarjrwars den and. father ..ot. Mate Ssrieritt.tus Hyers. is 79 years 'bid, but lie still likes to hunt fugitives. "Grandpa" Hyers, as he is called here, spends' his days loafing around his son's office and his nights sleep ing at his' son's house; The other night .when word was received at the Hyers home that -a Lincoln fire man had .'taken, a shot at Fred Brown and Brown was supposed to be hiding a mile and a halt from the Hyers' home, grandpa woke up and heard it., Suddenly members of the family saw grandpa emerge from his room, a gun and a flashlight in his hands. He walked to the jlace where they were searching' for Brown. "I guess I'm too old," grandpa said today. "I fell down twice and lost my flashlight " and gun. The chief of police picked me' up when I was sitting on a curb stone and took me back home. . , . ; There is an old saying that money talks, but much of the money of the -World' is now unable even to whis per. Loaf of Bread on Way 50 Cents of Every $1 Goes to Middlemen . to Table rom rarmer . Washington, June 12. A loaf of bread, the joint commission, on agricultural inquiry said in a report published today, offers a striking example of what happens to the farmers' products in the way of cost and profits before it reaches the family table. : x - About 50 cents out of each dollar the consumer pays for bread, the report said, is absorbed in cost of distribution. The farmer gets only 29.6 cents in the local market for the wheat needed to produce it A survey, showed that the average, cost of getting the wheat ready for the baking stage was 8.4 cents, while the average cost of manu facturing it into bread was 10.16 cents. "A considerable factor in the baker's cost of distribution, which averages 15.76 cents of the conr. sumer's dollar, is the service ele ment," said the report. "Our inquiry does not indicate . that the manufacturing baker has exacted an undue prorit in taking the 5.3 cents from the consumer's dollar for manufacturing bread and distributing it to the retailer." tin hiMiiiiiiiiimini ri ii-i. ri.ii. Writ for tne tan tna itacDapt. D..Gtrard.Ka. "Sleeps Like a Plow Boy" 1 nifferej to Tu with Earn In Hi CRANOLSNB kA m m ftn m vhita.iik. a4 I dan lite ale bo."-J. MeCradua. Mraaoa C, Ttna. Writ taa two 7W1 mtUr qumawnHajiinkiHili. Boatj rWOnfj Rilsrud tf Rot SithtM Vacuum l ube Used in Various Ways Sensitive Devibo ': Amplifies , Souncf Wave as Well as It : Generates, Currents. , By JOHN E. KENNEBECK. (Tfcl la Iha ItUK tatUIUml at Tba Ba' atorjr of raalo.t , The vacuum tube is a rapid change actor. In one way it makes meat urement s in the millionths of an inch and again it is amplifying sound-, waves or is amplifying heartbeats of a patient to aid physicans to diag nose a case. ' A noted professor of physics has proven that the vacuum tube is an ultra-micrometer in that it is able to register, measurement ,to the slightest degree 1 by1 the connection of a gal vanometer or measuring instrument to the plate and grid of the tube. Similarly, the vacuum tube is used in science as a weighing machine. The engineer will find use for the ultra micrometer in . measuring stresses, while the botanist has already em ployed it in measuring "growth pulses" of plants. It is doing also a great humanitarian good. It is helping the deaf to hear in that the vacuum tube amplifies 'sound-waves. Through the aid of a vacuum tube, it is now possible for a physician in New York to listen to the heart beats of a patient in San Francisco. Thus we understand the sensitive ness of the vacuum tube, that is con sidered the nerve of radio outfits. Radio Fans, Beware of "Boodeg". Tubes The following appears in the Amer ican Radio Journal recently and has a bearing on the interests, of radio amateurs in general:! "Owing to the shortage. of vacuum tubes, numerous 'pirates' have en tered' the field in violation of patents controlling the manufacturers, and are hawking 'bootleg" tubes among dealers and consumers. The legiti mate manufacturers haye spent years perfecting vacuum, tubes and have at tained to a high degree of perfection that cannot be approached by the bootleggers. In fact, many of the 'bootleg' . tubes will not work at all and the remainder, at best, last only a few hours in operation. For this reason, no guarantees . are given by ''.''" '.'-;."''-'(,''.'. Always in Good Taste the bottleggert, and the makers and distributor are not disclosed. ; "Complaint, are pouring in in re spect to ihete fraudulent tubes, and dealers will certainly regret their purchase and tile, even in small amounts, "Dealers and the public in general should protect theuuelves by buying only those tubes that have the same name of the manufacturer or sellers plainly 'marked on the bate of the tube or 'on the carton containing it. Another indication of the legitimacy of the tube it the patent, dated Nov. 7.1905. Jan. IS I907. and Feb. 18. 1903 marked on the cartons or on the tubes by the regular licensed manu facturers. If none of these markings are found it is very good evidence that the tube is a 'bootleg' tube, and the dealer or user should refute to be duped." SPARKS Here .are some terms used com monly in radio: . B. Battery A small dry battery that is used in a vacuum tube circuit only. It it built so that a hish volt age is given which is necessary for the operation of the tube. Some of the batteries are arranged in such a way that the voltage may be varied. ' Current The amount of electricity passing a given point in uni time; measured in amperes. C W. Continuous wave. D. C Direct current. : 'Detector The device, either crys tal or vacuum tube, that is used to detect the incoming waves and rec tify them so that they may be made understandable. As many know from experience it is very hard sometimes to get a sen sitive spot on some pieces of crystal and often it is necessary to break up the mineral. This is a messy job and need not be done. An expert takes the mineral, places it face down on a flat file and rubs down to a clean new surface. This can be done several times with the same piece, and some wonderfully good spots are sure to be found. Try it. Cupid Outwits Mother as Lincoln Couple Elopes Cupid outwitted an anxious Lin coln mother Saturday. Gordon W. Miles, 23, and Christian Wilcox, 16, eloped from their homes in Lincoln Saturday morning, flivver ing to Omaha. Omaha police were notified over long distance telephone by the girl's mother,, Mrs. M. Wilcox, to intercept ; "We're here and we're gladl" . ; the kiddies say it's appetite's :j . answer to a helping of Post ' " ! ! p , Toasties. No coaxing necessary; it's fan to eat. One taste of these crisp, golden-brown flakes of : .i- goodness and then ; j ; "Let's Go!" l :f A willing appetite forwards . I , its enthusiasm to body and brain. ; That helps digestion. ! There's energy-building nour ishment, in Post Toasties, and ; ':, ; . added nourishment with the cream or milk, -improved com fbhsa the pair. Toliit learned that Xlile and Mi Wilco had talm out s licenec to wed in Council liluffs. Later Deirctivet feumiuiu and Dsvit found the couple al the Kern hotel in Omaha, where they had reg tipn.MentCa Socks for theTinyTots and Their Flapper Sisters- Too They say big folks are little folks in lots of wayand socks are one of the ways the big sister resembles the small one. But after all you can't blame them if they are desirous of keeping cool. The children's socks in the three quarter length have the cuff top and are of mercerized lisle with the derby stripes. In black, white and cordovan. Small sizes, 65c. Large sizes, 75c. Their older sisters' come in the three quarter length also. They are very smart, fashioned of silk and lisle, with fancy striped two-tone effects. Price $1.25. Main Floor Food Fun Let this joyous, healthful food bring inspiration to your break fast tomorrow. Try it for a quick lunclL A Post Toasties supper for the children will prepare the way for sweet dreams. Convenient serve right from the package. Economical gen erally costs less than a cent a serving. Post Toasties are 'known everywhere as the quality com flakes. It will pay you to order by name, and make. sure of getting the ' Yellow and Red package. . .Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc. Battle Creek, Mich. istered. I'olict got in touch with . Mr i, Vili.x in IjhcoIii. They told her of the license. "Oil. well, if they're married, let -Vi gi," the Mid, No the newlywrd are free. an application for an injunction UmH Mevunril Drug Staret (