The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, July 28, 1922, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE OMAHA BEK: FRIDAY.- JIM jv;
Miner-Operator
Conference in
Wyoming Fails
.o Agrremrnt Reached Bf
raup Union Representatives
Disclaim Authority to Art,
Declare Omahan.
J. E. Megrath, vie president of the
Sheridan ( o.il company, returned
rterduv from a turning in I hey.
f.'inr of Wyoming roal cj-rator ami
iiiiiiit' rrreent,itivc in an effort
tit Harre mi a vae ttcale ami Mart
ih nuns in lli.it -Lit.
"It an aliM'hiip failure, owing
to lh portion taken hv miner' rep
A u'srnt.itivi ," he said. "Governor
" 1'arcy called the meeting at the re
iuet of I'resident Harding. P. J.
'Juralry, president of the Wyoming
I'o.il Operators' association, stated
that the operators agreed with Presi
dent Harding's request for immediate
resumption at the wage scale in ef
fect before the strike was called ind
readjustment of the wage scale by a
hoard of arbitration.
Astonishing Reply.
"In reply to this, the two miners'
representatives, Martin Cahill, presi
dent of the Wyoming union and
James Morgan, secretary, astonished
the meeting by stating that they had
no authority to negotiate and that
this authority was possessed only by
the policy committee, composed of
some 200 union officials from all over
the country.
"When requested by the governor
to endeavor to secure from the policy
committee authority to negotiate, the
union officials replied that the policy
committee is not now in session.
They declined to ask the committee
to meet. They further stated that
they knew appeal to the police com
mittee for authority to negotiate a
settlement would be futile.
No Decision.
"After the meeting had ended thus
the operators asked the governoT
what would be his policy if they
tried to open their mines. He replied
that if the sheriffs of the counties
vere unable to maintain order he
would send in the state's military
forces."
Mr. Megeath said the operators did
not decide whether or not they will
attempt to open the mines under
protection of the troops. He declared
the great surplus of men in the coal
mining industry is responsible, for
much of the dissatisfaction.
Attracted by Big Wages.
"They have been attracted by the
big wages," he said. "Between 1914
and 1921 wages in the Wyoming
mines have increased 117 to 177 per
cent."
"But the miners say they don't
make a living wage because the mines
are shut down part of the year. How
about that?" he was asked.
"Seventy per cent of the coal min
ers don't want to work more than
hey don't have to make a living. If
;hey can make a living by four hours'
work a day they will work that long
nd then lay off. Or they will work
;hree days a week. This habit ham
pers operation." I
Six hundred telegrams ordering
radio sets were received ope fore
soon by one manufacturing concern.
Make Own Grid Leaks
Pencifne on
Scratch on mica and pencil line
grown mru jl Mia?
Happy Memory
Is Reward for
Gift to Babie
m ...
7 vr
copper
Tinfoil-2'XI1
Paraffin paper-6 Mils thick
Those radio fans who wish to make
their own grid leaks and condensers
may follow these directions. The
simplest grid leak is made by draw
ing a pencil line on a piece of paper
and fastening the ends of the paper
strip to the wood of the cabinet or in
strument base with wood screws,
with copper washers under the heads,
to which the circuit wires can be thus
attached firmly. A common size of
grid condenser has a capacity, of
,00025 microfarads.
If paraffined paper six-thousandths
of an inch thick is used, the paper al
ways being somewhat larger than
the tinfoil, then two tinfoil or copper
leads, 2x1 inches, will be sufficient to
give thts capacity. Two pieces of
copper leaf or foil are cut or bound
in the two ends of the condenser
leaves, as shown in the detail at fig
ure 6.
Two other pieces of paraffined
paper should be cut out. or three in
all, the two copper or tinfoil leaves,
being separated by the central
paraffined paper sheet. The three are
then rolled around the mica or card
board strip and tied in place with a
piece of string.
The tinfoil and paper leaves should
be wound tightly around the paper
strip and preferably placed under sev
eral books until they have firmly
creased and set. A pencil line may
be drawn through a scratch in the
mica, or if a piece of cardboard is
used, a pencil line is drawn between
the two metal eyelets as shown.
WAAW
Tonight
57
Consider
the beans
of the field
how they grow. Some
are tough little dried
up beans. Others get to
be fine large fat meaty
beans. Goodness knows
where all the little dried
up beans go. The fine
large ones go to the
Heinz kitchens where
they are baked in real
cvens with Heinz de
li, ous Tomato Sauce.
HEINZ
OVEN BAKED
BEANS
with Tomato Sauce
Crisp C rutted, Fresh
Green Apple Pie
5 with any order all
this week.
When in Omaha Stop at
Hotel Rome
The ether will resound with music
sweet and melodious tonight when
the Omaha Bee broadcasts another
clever program of entertainment
features from the Omaha drain Ex
change station, WAAW.
Lharles W. Fettis, blind musician,
who has been entertaining street
crowds in Omaha for the current
week with ballads and popular melo
dies on the accordion will be one of
the features of The Omaha Bee's program.
Mr. Pettis, who has been blind for
the past five years, is playing his way
across the continent from Long
Beach, Cal., to Boston. His wife and
4-year-old child, Elsa, are with him.
He will play two classical selections
for radio audiences.
Maurice Ingram, boy saxophone
king, is only 14 years old, but he
plays some wicked notes. He'll jazz
three saxophone solos for radio au
diences tomorrow that'll be listening
in on The Omaha Bee's concert to
morrow night. .Young Ingram's se
lections will be "Saxophobia," "Sax
alia," and "Saxology." He is a pupil
of Will L. Hetherington.
The third feature on The Omaha
Bee's radio program tonight will
be two operatic vocal numbers by
Mrs. James Burns, Scottish singer
who sang before royalty in Europe.
So well was her voice received by
radio audiences several weeks ago
that her operatic numbers are expect
ed to make a hit.
SPARKS
From Toronto comes word that the
radio fever has spread from the
United States to Canada, and all the
electrical firms and even other or
ganizations not closely associated
with electrical apparatus are experi
encing an extraordinary inflation of
trade. Factories are running under
pressure, with three shifts every 24
hours, under conditions similar to
those prevailing in munition works
m the urgent days of the war.
A system enabling telephone sub
scribers of Pekin and Tientsin,
China, to talk to each other by radio
from their house or office telephones,
the conversation taking place over
wire lines to the central office and
then by radio between the two cities
a distance of over 80 miles was in
stalled by the China Electric com
pany recently and tested successfully.
The equipment is the product ot an
American company. It is believed
that this is the longest radio tele
phone sen-ice open to public use in
the world.
Macon Prairie Pioneers
Observe Golden Wedding
Franklin. Neb.. July 27. (Special.)
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Blank cele
brated their golden wedding Tuesday.
Open house was held at the Macon
Prairie Methodist Episcopal church.
Seven children, 31 grandchildren, one
great-grandchild and 400 other rela
tives and friends attended.
Blank organized the first Sunday
school at Macon Prairie.
Aged Iowa Laborer
Kills Blacksmith
Who Was Whistling
Panama. Ia., July 27. Math
LHerbst, 60, a blacksmith, stood in
front of his shop early Wednesday
morning whistling cheerfully.
Across the street walked John
Schaefer, 70, laborer. He called to
Herbst saying: "Come over and
whistle for me."'
As Herbst crossed the street,
Schaefer is alleged to have struck
him with an ax. Herbst died from
his injuries. '
Schaefer, who is being held in the
jail at Harlan without bond on
charges of first degree murder, is re
ported to have remarked as Herbst
was being carried away: "I make
them quit whistling."
Schacfer's dislike for whistling is
said to amount to a ouoia
Ministers' Wives Hurt
as Auto Turns Over
Alliance, Neb., July 27. (Spe
cial.) Three women were , injured
and two men and a baby narrowly
escaped injury when a Ford car,
owned and driven by Rev. C. G. S.
Johnson of Alliance, in which they
were riding, turned over on the
Alliance-Hemingford road, near Be
rea Tuesday night. The women
injured are Mrs. Johnson, wife of
the minister; Mrs. C. R. Mattison,
wife of the Rev. C. R. Mattison, Naz
arene pastor, and Mrs. J. H. Carroll.
Mrs. Johnson, who suffered the worst
injury, was thrown clear off the ma
chine into a barbed wire fence, suf
fering a dep gash on her leg. Mrs.
Mattison sustained severe bruises,
and Mrs. Carroll was painfully in
jured about her feet. Rev. Mr. John
son was driving about 35 miles an
hour in an effort to reach home ahead
of a rainstorm, which was approach
ing, when the steering wheel sudden
ly dropped off, sending the machine
into a four-foot ditch, where it up
set. The car had no top, which is
believed to have saved the occupants
from more serious injury. The ma
chine immediately burst into flames
and was almost destroyed.
Four-Year-Old Boy Expires
From Rattlesnake Bite
Albia, la., July 27. The first death
from snake bite in years in southern
Iowa, occurred when Worth Nelson,
4, died at his home near here after
having been bitten by a rattlesnake
Tuesday afternoon. I
One Dollar Can Do Knormom
Good When Administered
Through The Omaha
Bee Milk Fund.
"What I gave. I have." Mid the
wie man, speaking of the money he
had given in his lifetime to charity.
You will always "have" what you
give to this fund to supply to sick
babies in homes of deep poverty life
giving milk during summer's heat.
You can never lose it. You will al
ways have the pleasant memory of it.
A dollar can do enormous good
when administered through The
Omaha Bee fund by the Visiting
Nurses,, in bringing comfort and
health to suffering babies who have
no other help.
Will you rctue one of the little
ones itiul give it milk in its poor little
homo? Just scud your contribution
to "Milk Fund. The Omaha Bee."
Thank you.
rrovlnuidjr arknnw Irdced SSS'.'.fM
3. IMP
ft. II.
A FrUnd
A fubtrrlber, Valentlna, Nfb. ,
Nellie' W.' Taylor.' Arradla,' Neb'
. KrlMid
R. B. Rule. Faila Clr. b. ...
E. II. I
Total
I (HI
ton
ton
l.nn
5.xi
S.im
t.oo
$mi,m
Farmer Is Nabbed
as Beer Magnate
Columbus Man Jailed by Fed-
eral Sleuths Following Raid
Three Stills Seized.
Federal "dry" agents, headed by
Robert Anderson, group chief, raided
the farm of John Horjiug, three
miles east of Columbus. Neb., late
Tuesday afternoon. They found
three stills, a large quantity of mash
and two gallons of alcohol.
Anderson arrested Hornue and
his farmhand, Henry Grenberger, and
brought them to the county jail in
Omaha that night. They gave bond
Wednesday and returned to Co
lumbus. Suspicion pointed to Hornug as a
bootlegger when federal agents were
told he was the one who furnished
2.100 bottle of beer, blown up by
hijackers last week when thev shot
Walter Carston near Grand Island.
Delie Corr and Floyd Shank were
with tb.e wounded man, who is now
near the poi,nt of death in a Grand
Island hospital.
Orders for the booze were taken
in a Columbus office, after which
cars drove out to " Hornug's farm
where the orders were filled, accord
ing to Anderson. Tom Carroll, Eu
gene Battin, Vogel and Hancock
were other federal officers in the
raid.
Howell Spends $634 in
Election; Butler, $276
Lincoln, July 27. (Special.) R.
B. Howell, Omaha, spent $634.17 in
his primary campaign for republican
nomination for United States sena
tor, according to a statement filed
in the office of D. M. Amsberry,
secretary of state. Expenses of other
major candidates filed to date: Dan
Butler, $276.80; Charles H. Randall,
$519.04; Albert H. Byrum, $525;
Charles W. Bryan, $136.
Standings Unchanged by
Official Primary Returns
Official returns thus far ' received
on the race for republican nomination
for attorney general in the recent
primary have failed to change the
standing of the candidates. Returns,
some official and some unofficial,
with the state practically complete
give O. S. Spillman of Pierce 31,765,
and William Dorsey of Lincoln 30,261
rTHE valUe. giving storeJ
Begins Mpnday Morning
July 31st, at 8:30
Read Our Sunday Ait
10 to 50 Per Cent
DISCOUNTS
a Fumhuro, Rugs Draperies, Stoves and Refrigerators
FREE!
FREE!
FREE!
MONDAY, JULY 31, AT 8 P. M.
Bowen's will give away, absolutely FREE, a four-piece (including
table) Fiber Living Room Suite.
Thirty-two other useful articles will also be given free. Come
in ask about it bring your, friends.
No Purchase Required
Church Orchestra Engaged for Series of
Concerts on Aurora Courthouse Lawn
4 1 1 ,um
L saa ., ..W . m J
Aurora. Neb.. July 27.. The Aeol
ian orchestra of the First Christian
church was organized three years
ago by Mrs. Bernice Marvel. Its,
reputation grew until it was engaged
by Aurora to give a series of con
certs on the courthouse lawn, where
thousands assembled to listen. Mem
bers of the orchestra are: Mrs. Mar
vel, director; Clyde L. MeCon
aughey, manager; string section,
Mary Ellen Edgerton. Ethel Bute,
Nora Lyons. Ruby Kimball,
ence Bute. Harold Larson,
Bute; woodwind section: Eva Bute,
Alma Condon, Ray Thornton, F.dwin
Newton, F.dwin Tuepker; brass sec
tion: Floyd Wright, Cecil Jacobs,
Edward Br;int, Claire Weekley. Carl
I. Flor-(Davidson, Harold F.dgrrion. Chester
Sterling ' Beins; percussion: Kay I.aShallr.
Policeman Halts
Grain Exchange
'Clean-Up' Scheme
''Friend, Letting Trkamah
Man in on "Inside Tip,"
Held for lnvfKti.
gation.
Just as O. N. Lunge of TeUuuh.
Nrli , ua about to lay down the cash
for a "clean up on the Omaha Gram
exchange" yesterday morning, l'a
trolniau Joseph Zich interfered.
Now, l.angc's two new friends
with two other men, are held for in
vriigatiin. l.angc became acquainted with an
a'fahlc stranger at the Castle hotel
Wednesday night and yetrrd.y
morning went walking with him. On
the steps of the public library they
found a pocketbook.
It contained a cipher message.
Now appears a breathless stranger.
crying, .Mine.
You ve been mighty quaie Willi
me, he coniuics. i n let you in
on this. It is the dope necessary
for a cleanup on the grain exchange,
come on, 'let's give iliem three bar
rels.
A city fireman across the street
saw it all. lie told the patrolman
and 7.ich rounded up the two men
with Lange and two more who were
watching suspiciously from across
the street.
They taid they were Edward J.
Carter and William C. Davis of Kan
sas City; Edward Winson, San An
tonio, Tex., and William Smith, 1007
South Eleventh street.
I i
The Goodyear Cord Truck Tire
Is Now Made Rut-Proof
The buoyant, active, trac
tive Goodyear CordTruck
Tire is now made proof
against the ruts.
To that great durability
which it has demonstrated
from its pioneer days in
country hauling, whether
on the road or in the fields,
has now been added extra
resistance to rut wear.
The result of special design
and construction is a Good
year Cord Truck Tire
capable of mastering road
conditions severer than
any other pneumatic can
possibly endure.
1 has an extra thick side- strutted of stoutest long-staple
wall of toughest tread stock cotton cords, laid in groups of
reaching from bead to head plies that alternate in direction
around the tire. and are insulated in pure rubber.
2 Its body is specially con- 1 A double breaker strip backs
w
up the tread.
4 The tread itself is the power
fully tractive Goodyear All
Weather Tread, famous for
its sure-footedness in any going.
The sidcwall construction of the rut-proofed
Goodyear Cord stands up to thousands of miles
of combat with the deepest, hardest ruts.
The patented group-ply construction keeps the
tire cool internally.
The sharp, thick blocks of the All-Weather Tread
bite deep into the mud, slush, snow or ice. Their
wedge-like action prevents side slip. Their steady
forward gripping carries the truck onward full
distance at every turn of the wheel, saving fuel
and engine strain.
The Goodyear Cord Truck Tire today is the
supreme pneumatic for dirt-road hauling.
Its tested ability to withstand the severest con
ditions of service results in unexampled mileage
at low cost Made in all standard sizes from 4Vi
to 10 inches.
For other types of hauling, Goodyear makes other special types of tires.
Sold and serviced by your Goodyear Truck Tire Service Station Dealer
Goodyear Means Good Wear
For Sale by
Truck and Tractor Corporation
DO. 0648
1310 Jackson
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