Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 9, 1915, Page 2

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‘WHEAT CROP BIGGEST IN WORLD WAS EIGHTY-FIVE YEARS OLD |HIGH PRICES SWELL THE TOTAL Cmae!a. | ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.-—~The na- Just after m;;:;lnx his eighty-| WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—The na- | Lot the Redfern Corset J 3 b t i » o 5 duction and tobacco almost equalled its .""“ higher “P':_" being :::‘ ’:;’m_ GEN. C.CAMMUNROE ©mvrmsswonas. #ases of the Poung Men's Christian assoclation | pest production. The rye and hay crops I D the nation's crops this year undoubtedly — at Evanaton, Tll. Louis R. Dale I8 out|wepe recorded in point of value. | will be the most valuable ever grown, of the city at present, being a special| Tne approximate value of the barley notwithetanding the heavy production| LABOR co““mou BULGARIAN AND traveling insurance agent. orop is SUASTT,E; the rye crop, $57.861,408; which ordinarily would have the effect | K’"‘: 1:"" g ;;' 0;)“:[“ in 1886 £rom |, oxwheat, $13,854,760; potatoes, 3318,426,54; a; g ankakee, where Mr, o Y 060; hay, $877,064,800; B B REFUSES SEATS T0 TEUTON FOROES | % sistunes sad seaktic vestmton.| T3 dotatoen, st s, hay, 14001 i o oot o Wik KROWE a8 Osachof Nobrushe due| TONOR | WILIAAN; - tobacea, SHEEEM warious crops, preliminary estimates in ) " | flaxseed, $30,060,634; rice, $22,813,350; apples, >, g B A e JAPAN'S DELEGATES| ~ SOLIDLY UNITED i o ans fo v o s Soeiet st i s Y2 3PN charye s orops and the average of the five tivities. They helped organise the Han- | H¥-FC e trom parath _— Park Methodist church, corner of | ¥ purposes, - Mu:"m:: prigoig (Continued from Page One.) (Continued from Page One) v v g Passes Three Billion Mark. | CORN CROP MOST YALUABLE GROWN Three Billion Bushels on Basis of November Prices Worth Over Two Billions, tion's corn crop this year was the most valuable ever grown. prices pald farmers November 1 is worth ‘nearly two billion dollar $1,913,025,000 In exact figures. Based on it In size, it is second only to the record crop of 1912, The production was 3.090,609,000 bushels, or 34,000,000 less than the country's previous big- gest corn crop. Unprecedented harvest returns, with many crops showing production records which may remain unbroken for years, are shown in the Depart- nent of Agriculture’s November re- | completed, as two sons are not in Omaba | tion of 3,090,600,000 bushels—384,000,..v bush- $3.50 up port, made from m canvass of the and have not been heard from. els below the record crop—is worth $1,913,- country on November 1, and issued | Typically a “seif-made man,” Mr. Dale | o555 071, the most valuable corn crop ever Be Fitted i Wheat, with a production of almost one-fourth of the world’s entire out- put this year, has established a rec- crd never before reached by that crop | in any nation.. The American har- vest this year exceeds the previous| record production of wheat in this| country by more than 110,000,000 Oats, barley, rye, sweet potatoes, hay, tobacco, rice and peaches all have been . the 1914 crop. """"':': “""‘h“"" “;:"l'h.":mr"‘:‘ born at Kankakee. All are residents of| Barley, rye, swest potatoes, hay and m““ po - g single year ¥ Omaha and engaged in insurance work, | rios were recorded crops in point of pro- bushels, L., 000's 823 957 084 s cEESEE 10.01 JONES RESTRAINS DAKOTA EXAMINER 8 D, Nov. 8.—(Spe- )~Judge Jones, of the court, after having had the advisement for about & today granted an injunction re- J. L. Wingfield, state publle of South Dakota, from enforc. requiring the State banke the state to deposit & per 067 Colorado last yoar. %1% | tions had practically coerced and Intimi- THE BEE: GENERAL SIR C. C. MUNRO, the new British commander at the Dardanelles, appointed to succeed Sir Ian Hamilton, leaving the war office in London, with Lady Munro, after the general had received his instructions. bor, the reports recommends that all in- ternational unions be urged to give the plan th support. The report covers the recent investiga- Up to the present we have received no complaint nor have we learned of any ot in which the military arm of the government had misused the Dick law to offset or ocurb the aspirations of the working people of the land. * * * We refer partioularly to the situation In * * * The corpora- dated the officlals of the over-ridden the laws of t| There is not nearly so gra: the Dick law as thero is In the menace threatening our Institutions through the private deteotive agencies and the pri- vate army of gun me Pratse tor Chatrman Walsh, Attention is also called In the report to the work of the United 'States Commis- #lon on Industrial Relations. Chair- man Walsh and the labor representatives, Mesars. O'Connell, Lennon and Garret- son, are praised for their “Judgment and dotermination which brought to otherwise been concealed or overlooked,'” ‘The commission's report is strongly in- dorsed by the executive council, which recommends that the convention urge the next congress to make the report and hearings of the commission public docu- ments, “Because the commission did not follow conventional lines and so presented facts and materials that are usually carefully suppressed and not avallable to the masses of the people,” the report con- tinues, “there was Initlated against the commission a campaign for the purpose of discrediting in advance the final re- port. However, the labor movement as well as all citizens who have sympathy and understanding of the lives of the ‘wege earners united in a determined ef- fort to defeat this campalgn and to make known their approval of the policy the commission followed." Sea Bill Aprroved. In reviewing legislation by the last con- wood effective than any ome of these which ° . gress the report expresses the exsoutive 'hm,,.,"h,,,,:',..‘"" upon ourselves and| nreceded it. Not only were several dooks ||| 0.-G. Shoe Stote B“ ains in council's approval of the il iy damaged, but warehouses were burned W. 0, W. Blag. | seamen’s Blames American Shippers. R g A X : ! large ] and some of the ships hf Om Sale Next L o o 7, 1| T Gt S B Sovrn | %, S Sty o ke . BRACES THE U || practically new Sral publio who ravel the Nigh seas mad, | et has shown & desire to reduce In-| senal, it s claimed, was struck and some | | Shoes shat’ wers icl it the report adds, “we feel confident fn | ol hience to neutral trade to & mini- | of the machinery destroyed. sold at $3.50 and articles 1n F or asserting that the passage of this logisla- | T DUt that it 1a notorious that the| It is asserted that the London docks | |[$d, Patgnt leather, Sale™ col ’ e g b o iy agendd “‘I:"Ml of concealment, which it de- | were effectively bombarded, as were the < Dale” column: read of its distinctions." clares have been adopted by American | East India docks, where a blg warehouse W unstrung nerves —a was 1,M6,347, a decrease of 74,84 members, the first decrease in total membership since 108, While the average member- ship for the year shows & decrease of 74824, the September membership s L9111, & decrease of only 26,40. A affected by the European war. tures for the year 1915 were $308,95.95 and recelpts, $ITLE!8, as compared with $E.T.2 and $263.006.57 In 1904 Rioting Reigns as many wrongs and Injustices that migl t\ Statistical reports were read showing | the average membership for the Amer- | ican Federation of Labor for the year ! steady growth in membership is predioted | to follow the readjustment of conditions | Expendi- | Dvinsk. The offensive movement of the Russians In Galicla along the Stripa has been halted for the present and the long battle in that region has ended. There French Offensive Proceeding. BALONIKI, Nov. 8.~(Via London.)—The French offensive against the Bulgarians is proceeding surely but slowly because of the difficulties of the terrain in the sector northeast of Strumitsa. Kachaly and Meimisly were ocupied on the bth and Dolombo was stormed yesterday it 18 reported here. The French advance toward the north is sald to be continuing uninterruptedly today with a British con- tingent on the right wing. ‘The Serbs are reported to have repulsed heavy Bulgarian atacks in the Krivolak sector, where the French 0 have ma- terially extended their line, which reaches northwest beyond Gradsko and west be- yond the Thema river to the Kavacar region. 3 Turk: ofttelnl Re CONSTA NOPLE, Nov. la Lon- don.)—The following statement is issued by the Turkish was office: “Near Anafarta we have bombarded a torpedo boat and a transport of the amy. Several hits were observed. The transport fled enveloped in smoke. “On Saturday one of the enemy’'s aero- planes damaged by our fire fell into the sea near Kutschuk Temikll, “Near Arl Burnu there were artillery combats and vigorous bomb throwing. “Near Seddul Bahr the enemy after artillery preparation vainly attempted to advance agalnat our center, On the left wing the enemy fired 1,300 shells unsuccesstully,” ADYISES BRITONS 10 KEEP TEMPERS (Continued from Page One.) ——— e impossible to deal with questions arising between the allles and the United Btates while ignoring the practices of Admiral Von Tirpits and the changes in policy shippers exhibit & variety and ingenuity demanding the most thorough counter check. “It we have been driven to introduce new precedents into international law, we are only following in the footsteps of the American government in far less dvastic fashion than the records of the civil war dlsplay.” It contends that the spirit of interna- tional law is superior to the letter, “To that spirit,” it asserts, “we have ad- hered with the closest fidelity with & generosity to which some fuller recog: nition from leading neutral powers would not have been inappropriate. To resign any portion of our abllity to strangle the OMAHA, e e e e e e JOHN DALE DIES |CROPS ARE WORTH TUESDAY, NOVIMI | AT RIPE OLD AGE |Veteran Insurance Man Preaches Sermon on Sunday and Passes Away on Moaday. fifth birtbday a week ago Sunday ‘John Dale, well known old resident of Omaha, prominent Methodist |churchman and veteran insurance man, died yesterday at his home, 16538 Georgia avenue. Heart trouble and general break- down due to over-exertion, acute in- digestion and advanced age were the contributing causes of death. He had preached a sermon Sunday morn- ing and was suddenly taken 1] imme- |diately afterward. Funeral arrangements have not been was left an orphan when very young, had only & common school education, and yet had attained prominence in his chosen field and won the respect of all who knew him. He was born in England Oc- tober 81, 15%, and was taken to Canada by his parents, Richard and Isabella Craddock Dale, when 2 years of age. He and was married to Miss Hllen Johnson at aKnkakee, Ill, in 1808 Five Sons Survive. Besides the wife, ve sons survive: John F., Arthur B, Walter H., Louls R. and Fred B. Dale, all of whom were except Arthur B. Dale, who is secretary Woolworth and Georgia avenues, in 1886 He continued an officer and leading mem- ber of that church, and later also be- came a trustee of the Diets Memorial Methodist church on South Tenth street. dent bishop as a local preacher. Since the organization of the Jennings Me- | morial Methodist church, Mr. Dale had been in charge as its acting pastor. Preaches Sermon Sunday. A week ago Sunday he d od himself by preaching one of his most powerful sermons on the occasion of his eighty-fifth birthday. Again last Sun- day morning he preached at the Jennings church, apparently in his usual health and vigor, delivering a forceful sermon. His collapse followed and he gradually sank into unconsciousnsss. Surrounded by his wife and three of his sons, he passed away peacefully at 2 p. m. Monday. At the time of his death Mr. Dale was | senlor partner of the firm of John Dale & Son, in which hé-handied life and mo- cident’ insurgnce ‘with his you Fred B. Dale. The other sona here fire finsurance In separats agencles, Mr. Dalg was at his office, In his usual health and fattending to his business as recently as last aSturday. He was a strong prohibitionist, in prac- tice and preaching, as well as in politics. He belonged to thé Omaha Commercial |club and was'a mpmber of the Nebraska Life Underwriters. He also bel to ithe Canaedian club. and was the local tressurer of the Hritish Rellef funq for war sufforers. Berlin Reports Great Damage in London by Zeppelin Bombs BERLIN, Nov. 8—(By Wireless to Say- ville)~Very serfous material damage was done in London and the metropolitan district by the Zeppelin bombardment of October 13, according to information ob- tained from an authoritative milithry source here. The rald was vastly more { was busned. The quay wall of the city ot London docks was damaged and a cotton warehouse was burned at Viotoria docks. The tower of London and the tower bridge were bombarded. | The city proper and the newspaper quarters sutfered heavily, the Morning Post bullding being damaged. Many butidings were demolished in St. George, Lehmann, Liverpool, Moorgate and Min- | ores streets, Chancery Lane, Bishop's Gate and Old Gate. In some places en- tire blocks have been wiped out. Among the blocks burned was that occupled by he Southwestern bank. ces Go Down, .—(By Wireless to | BERLIN, Nov. attended the public schools of Buffalo | 1915. SR 9, ~ MORE THIS YEAR ! [ Valae is About Half a Billion Del- lars Greater Than that of ! 1914 Output. | tion’s principal farm crops this year are worth about five and a half bil- | llon dollars, exceeding by more than | | half a billion their value in 1914, the | previous banner year in the country’s | icmp history. There has been an un- | precedented harvest, many of the | crops exceeding their best records, {and high prices, due to the influence jof the Buropean war, have con- tributed to swell the total value. Statistics announced today by the De- partment of Agriculture in its November crop reports base values on prevalling November prices. Corn with a produc- grown. It exceeds the former biggest value crop, that of 1914, by $190,000,000. Wheat Worth More, Wheat, with the largest prodction ever known In any country, 1,002,029,000 bushels, or about one-fourth of the world's orop this year, is worth $932,504,000, or $54,000,000 morethan the record made in 1914. The oats crop also was a record one both in point of production and value. The harvest was 1,517,478,000 bushels—al- most 100,000,000 bushels better than the record of 1912—and its value $582,506,823, 18 $38,000,000 more than the record value of In this year's harvest the corn crop| passed the 8,000,000,000 bushel mark for the second time, and the wheat crop crossed the 1,000,000,000 bushel mark for the first els during October, the crop now being placed at 359,268,000 bushel, That is 46,- 000,000 less than last year's crop, and the prospective moderate supply for winter use is reflected in the sharp advance in farm price from 487 cents a bushel on October 1, to 608 cents on November 1, The November 1 price is 8 cents higher than a year ago. The crop is shortest in the northern states, which grow the surplus of the late crop. The quality, too, is below the average A “For Sale” ad will turn l.cond-hlnd‘ furniture into cash. { APPEALINGLY FRAGRANT SupremeLy Deucious Butire Shoe Stock Otto Glick’s Ladies’ Handbags Pocket Books Manicure Sets Although we are known *“Om: ha's Best Kage B\ul\gfl" we would have you know that we carry a very desirable stock of small leather reshape your figure The old-new figure is here again—the round, shapely waist—not tight, but dis- tinctly fitted. Nature's curves taking on the shapely lines of the corset ——this {s what a Redfern Model does. Redfern Models are as comfortable as they are shapely. Come inand see the new fall styles. Corset Section—3d Floor | Our reasonable prices appeal to persons of judg- ment. Our moderate service charge appeals to dis- they receive. ‘‘Value received'’ is the motto of this establishment, BLACK BROADCLOTH CASKETS, FROM $30 UP. Horse or Auato Drawn Funerals DOUG. 887. Lady Attendant 2,706,834 | tion by labor leaders of the Dick mill-|are no developments of importance on the | Always an ardent Methodist, he was | time. criminating le who wish to for what b 15300 | tary law. In that connect'on, it says: | other fronts. authorized some years ago by the resi-| Potato prospects declined 9,000,000 bush- Ppeop. pay only Residence Parlors Omaha’s Only Independent Undertakers STACK & FALCONER 24th and Harney Sts. "THE OLD RELIABLE" W J. SWOBODA RETAIL DEALER PHONE DOUGLAS 222. OMAHA NEB eak, “‘shaky’’ feeling, agitation and .xcingllity. ting from mental stress or suffering—caused by lack of phosphates in the nerve cells. Renew the nerve-force, and brace the nervous system by taking HORSFORD’S Acld Phosphate (Non-Alcoholic) it. AMUSEMENTS, Gupnav Douglas o4, The Only High Class Vaudeville Cirouit. Daily Matines. 3:15 MRS. LESLIE gor Broa.: Max Ford aad Gertrude Dolan: Orpheun Travel Weekly. Prices: Matines, gallery, 10c; best meats (sxospt Saturday and Sunday). ds Nisbts Joo. she. and commerce of a pirate enemy, out of The . 2530 JEIA phite e e f & deference to merely technical argument Yetail pE"c..’"nF‘w.“:u'.' :?‘er‘u'z‘.’":‘:'né"u.";u' e B R ber Registrati BRAIIIEIS Today Zvac "3es Ef orts Are Ma.de B e ) our e | Wholeaals prices Inst woek on aasount ol || Sopete e s e el e in m €gl razaren ) Farewell Week! Use Breakers on Cars own clilizens. ™ lar, YAr |ot ¢ shipments of hogs to Berlin stock s for male before the enforcement he maximum price regulations made quality merchandise at reasonable prices, give each customer per- sonal attention. Edward LYNCH And Assoctate Players in Virginla Harned's Greatest Dramatie Triumph. THE WOMAN XE Mats., 150, Nov, 14: BOYD TEL" fomontw’ ) Walker Whiteside in THE RAGGED MESSENGER Nights, 850 to $1.50. Wed. Mat., 85¢ to 81 Thurs, Fri, Sat, Mat Sab me Mo’ HIGH JINKS Night. 850 to $1.50. Sat. Mat., 85c % §! Beats Now. o b {3€ o, pagmmcs bt at Free Evening High | C.E. Dailey, Shot at | - |75 T Seeer Charivari, is Dead | MARBLETON, Wyo., Nov. l.—(.pel‘ | clal)—C. B. Dalley, cashier of the Mar- bleton State pank, who was shot through the stomach while leading & party | There is one sure way that never falls chiarivaring Dan B. Crafton, died late [to remove dandruff completely and that yosterday from his wound, and Crafton is to gissolve it. This destroys it en- has been arrested on a charge of mur- [tirely. To do this, just get about four der. Crafton, who considered Dalley his |ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arven; ap- closest friend. is prostrated by grief. |ply it at night when retiring; use enough - Dalley is survived by a bride of five [to molsten the rcalp and 1ub it in gently WILKESBARRE, Pa., Nov. B~With | thousands of men and boys idle today, ripting and disorder by sympathisers of the striking motormen and conductors 250; Evgs., 85e, 38¢c, 800 “The Birth of a Nation. F reli‘:g & St:inle November 15 repregenting the state banking they will at once state supreme School —Wed. Evening. 17th and Leavenworth Sts. Yours for Service High School of Commerce Alumni The Easiest Way To End Dandruff i i HE Cosmetics Not Needed; Peel the Skin Instead : ction by Judge H it : ‘were wrecked. In the boroush of Edwardsville, a de- tall of state police broke up & crowd of 60 men and boys who had stoned & car i Continuous from 11 a.m. and driven the crew to shelter. In the |months. He was 3 years of ¥ with the fh L5 %o 11 pm. All Seats 100 < oo gy By oSy vy b e g OGRS umnh Weather stflps JBots Kfisrioon & vas. Department Ovders, 5:,09 Out Draughts BLANCHE SWEE in lssued for the officers )A_..‘b":r}:m 3‘-."."“.‘3.‘... =£;-M-‘lemmn-¢hfll-l-’ can have - lllunl‘%& | of | arvest. beth J. Limes, 9 Al M. |trace of it, no matter how much dandruft Strip at loss cost, and get 16 per B | to| Indignation against the strike breakers [ Fhy™ Omahs e DY AL LR mere effistency? in | assumed such proportions that ed R ou find, ton, Stching and | ‘mother, l:-m Belf dosen | mas” ot Mm,—m:-‘m -.-‘mh;.mww wnm-‘-ow- that open since Dakota, Charles W, » : | slowsy, silky soft, w alee windowy 3 u-' get liquid arvon at any drug oto., from o . F. H. Turney & Co. d. Bave you ever heard and cottages is all will need. This stmple rem- CREOLE RAUTIME BAND Tes'd cheaply by o edy bas mever been known to fall—Ad- 608 Ware Biock, Omahs. D. 4598 §.05har Bix Asta > Seats, Bryaat W-shbur ————— e e

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