rmh amy & ) Km ''"-'1 Y ,jf I V' lJ TOrNGPTERP SNAPPFP ON THEIR WAY TO THE OPENING DAY AT ' THE CASS KCHOOU ' WHEAT CROP IS 896,000,OOOBDSHELS Increase of More Than Million Bush els Over lait Year, is Govern ment Estimate. CORN YIELD IS ALMOST NORMAL Federal Reports Show Unare Store ( Food In I'nlted State on Which the Warring; Na tions Mar Drarr. WASHINGTON, Sept. S.-WUh the poa eibillty of some of the warring European nation calling upoi. the ' United States for grains, more than ordinary Interest attache to the Department of Agricul ture' crop reporting board forecasts of the else of the country's Important farm crops, as announced today. The total production of each crop, as interpreted by the crop reporting experts from the condition of the crop on September 1, with the production forecast interpreted from the August 1 condition. Uw, final production figures of last year's harvests and tbe average production for the last five years, (in millions of burhcls, I. e., OOO.ooo omitted): Sept. Aug. Fore- Koie- 1903-13 1313 Avcr- Crops. cant. cast. l'H6 XI 1 2.634 1.1M 4". 17 3.0 53 7f"l 17 Z4 tit) t rop. age. Winter wheat.... 75 Sprlnv wheat.... 221 All wheat ISM Corn :...i.n Oat 1,116 441 21) 2.447 1.122 lis 11 14 312 59 :iM IS, 2H 64 24i tifcS 2.7ti l.i:u 1S2 Hi 17 J57 5S !)M 30 24 W Harley W liye 43 Jiuckwheat White potatoes. Sweet potatoes.. Tobacco, pounds Flax Rice Hay, tons 17 371 55 552 16 24 Preliminary estimate. Comparison of the September with the August forecasts will show the change In bushels In the harvest prospects as ef fefted by weather and other conditions during August. Detail of Kara Crop. Details of each crop, other than total production, aa announocl by the depart ment follow: Spring wheat: Condition. 68 per cent of a normal, compared with 75.5 last month, 75.3 last year and 7t.6 the ten-year average. Indicated aero ' y'eld, 12 20 bubhela, compared with 13.3 the five-year average. Corn: Condition, 717 per ceat of a normal, compared with 718 last month, K5.1 last year and 79.4 the ten-year average. Indicated acre yield, 24.9 bushels, compared with 25.9, the five-year ke.rage. , Oats: Condition, 75.8 per cent of a normal, compared with 79.1 last month, 74.0 last year and 79 1 the ten-year average. Indicated acre yield, 29.1 bushel, com pared with 30.6 the live-year average. Barley: Condition, s2 1 per cent of a normal, compared with H.2 lant month, 7J 4 laat year and 0.2 the ten-year average. Indicated ucre yield, 2 I bushels, compared with 24 3 the .1' e-ye.ir average.. Buckwheat: Condition, . 87.1 per cent uf a normal, compared wlfii 88.8 last month, 75 4 last year and t- i tht ten-year averi?. Indicated acre yield. 21.5 bu.iliHs, com pared with 30.5 the five-year average. Whit potatoes: Condition. .-V.S per cent of a normal, compared witii 70 0 last month. . last year and 7S.0 the ten- year average, lnd catcd acre yield, v bushels, compared with 371 the tlvc-year average. bweet potatoes: Condition, 81.8 per rent of . normal, compared with 75.5 last month, 81.4 last year and 852, the ten year average. Indicated aire yield, 93 bushels, compared with V2.7, the five year average. Tobacco: Condition, 71 4 per cent of a normal, compared with i5 last month, 74 5 last year and 80 the ten year aver age. Indk aled KiT'i y eld. 72J pounds Compared with 815.1 po.ir.ds the five year average. Flax; ' Condition, 7S.7 per ecnt of a normal, compared with S2.1 last month, 741 last' year and 8.4, the ten year aver age. Indicated arre yield, 8 bushefa, com pared with 7.8. the five year avirage. Rice: Condition, S,9 per cent of a normal, coi.'iared 1th 87( last month, 28 last year, and 88.7, tlie ten year aver age, lud cstcd acre yield, 34 5 bushelu, compared wiih 3.3, the five year aver age. Hay :, Condition per rent of a nor mal, compared with tt.7 last month. In dicated arre yield, 1. 42 tons, compared with 1.S4 tons, the five year average. Apple: Condition, 81.9 per cent of a formal, oompared with (II last month. School Holds No Terror for These Q .J"Tw.n-,liiii ii iini.imiii I 11 in iiiimhi i jC"" 13 Fifteen thousand school children enrolled In the public and high school Tuesday. This is about 300 more than usual first day enrollment. Fifteen hundred enrolled at the Omaha High school. The enrollment at the Omaha High School of Commerce was 600. . 47." last year and 53.8, tht ten year aver age. The crop reporting board's next general report will be issued on Wednesday, October 7. Enforced Idleness in Germany a Problem; Men Do Boys' Work (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) BERLIN. Aug. 27.-War hits brought in Jts train, widespread Involuntary Idlcnete. Factories ar clwainr down -or running short-handed and the pinch of non-employment Is felt everywhere among the working cleaves. . Symptorm; of it are seen In the numbers of workingmen appearing on the streets as newsboys or seeking other unusual employment and In the heavy calls for assistance from the municipal and labor fund. Some trades, however, are affected in the oppoHitn direction, tinkers and butch ers are being advertised for, no many having been culled into field service with the troops that (or a time Interruption in the city's supply of bread and meat was feared. Brewers are also in demand, the brew eries being in full operation to supply the increased cemand from the cafes and restaurants where the public gather to await the war news and saddlers, tailors and carpenters are working overtime to supply the needs of the army. The bodies of the dead in this war are not, with occnElonal exceptions, returned to their relatives, but are buried on the field and where numbers require It, are buried in common grave. Valuables, pat ers and mementos are taken from bodies and made up in little packets to be sent to the relatives, and the dead soldiers, each wrapped In his canvas shelter tent, as ehroud, are laid, friend and foe, side by side. In long trenches In the ground for which tbey have contested. The great number of prisoners of war taken by the Germans in the early bat tles of the war already constitute a prob lem for the home authorities. They are being quartered In correnlration camps. Russian Victories May Keep Turks and ' Bulgaria Neutral LONDON, .ept. 8.-An Athens dibpatch t j the Times states that tin Hussian vlc- tories over Austria eppear tr hav j cleared the air somewhat in the Bulkans, although the danger of complications cannot be 'sad to have entirely paused. Tl.c popular i prehs bellpves the Ru-l.t victories cssure ! the neutrality of Turkey and Bulgarln. i Returning Troops I Pass Liege on the Way to Germany . . J LONDON, eept a A large number of i cji-rman troorw continue to repass Liege on thrlr way back to. Gvrmany, tsya an Antwerp dlspnt-.-h to te KtcauKe Tele graph company. 4JOU fttWEtGrtlcl AGJifixd. Vha fiat wAian du dcr now. Bet 4i Esrtdtm. Kiddies Heavy Receipts of Wheat Elsewhere is Cause of Drop Presumably due to the enormous north west receipts. S,05S carloads at Winnipeg and 1,729 at Minneapolis, the wheat mar ket was off, spot being 3 to 5 cents lower than laat Saturday. The Omaha receipt were: Wheat, 96; corn, 64, and oats, 115 cars. Notwithstanding the heavy receipt elsewhere, everything on the Omaha mar ket was cleaned up during the early hours of the session of the exchange, the September wheat selling at 81.03 1.11. as against ll.14Vol.16H In Chicago. Omaha cash corn sold around 7.1tj'75'c, while the Chicago prices were 741((r76lse. The Chicago option on December wheat ranged from $1.16 1.21ft, with May from 11.24 to $1.29. AMERICANS LEAVING BERLIN SEE NUMBERS OF WOUNDED LONDON. Sept. 8. -Many Americans ar rived last night from Brussels, Berlin and other continental cities. In Brussels the American relief committee haa injured a large house which Is stocked with a great supply of canned goods for use only in case of emergency. The laat eight of the American before leaving Berlin was a column of wagon conveying German wounded. The proces sion of van took three hour to pass a given point. There Is much destitution In Berlin on account of unemployment. Thousands of workmen have been applying for cheap dinners which are furnished at a nominal price to school children. In various part of the city the American relief commit tee is allowing stranded Americans 63 cent each dally for their board. MONTANA MAN TRIES TO SECURE DAUGHTER IN COURT Suit by Merle E. Smith, a merchant of Tcwnsend, Mont., for possession of hi 11-year-old daughter, IMna. now in the custody of her aunt, Miss Sylvia Brewer, a school teacher, and Audrey Brewer, stenographer at the Omaha club, was dis missed without prejudice and will be tried In the courts of Fremont, la., where th case originated. Mr. Smith and his wife separated after their marriage In Fremont county, Iowa, twelve years ago. The wife came to Omaha to live with Miss Brewer, her i ti r, and died some time since. Mr. Smith married attain, and being without chil dren, aought to secure this daughter by his first wife. I'hemberlaljB'a Ualmrat. If you are ever troubled with aches, pains or sorene of the muscles, you will appreciate the .good qualities of Chamberlain's Liniment. 'Many sufferer from rheumatism and sciatica have used it with the best results. It la especially valuable for lumbago and lame back. For sale by all dealers. Advertisement. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Alex Gunther, 370 Farnam street, has arrived safely In N"w York from the var scne of F.uroie, according to advlcea received in Omsia. THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY. SE1TEMHEK 0. 1014. W1 Longer wbeelbase More room Improved body Improved upholstery More power Larger bore Larger valves Better carburation Improved combustion chamber Special quiet cams Valve tappets operating in oil Improved motor lubrication 13 clutch plates Intake manifold water jacketed New type radiator Improved steering Easier clutch operation o3 For the third time the Hupp Motor Car Company has produced a car which, we believe, will prove immeasurably superior to any that assumes to compete with it. The first Hupmobile 20 made for itself, and held against all rivalry, an immense following, at home and abroad. The "32" put the Hupmobile into another class, and surpassed the "20" in world-wide popularity. The new Hupmobile bids fair to eclipse them both, as the very utmost a motorist can desire. A highly specialized, individualized, Hupmobilized motor car, which gives you, we believe, more service and comfort for your money than you can find if you comb the market a dozen times over. Listen to the details: More Power Motor, 3-inch bore by 64 -Inch stroke; cylinder cat en bloc, with water Jacket space between bar rel; valves l4-lnch clear diam eter, mushroom tappets, with spe cial shape cams, very quiet, valve spring chamber closed by oil-tight cover, so that contacts are made In an oil bath. New shape combus tion chamber, larger valves and larger cylinder bore produce more power. Multiple disc, clutch, with thirteen 13-inch plates. New Type Carburetor Horizontal type bolted directly to cylinder block. Gas passage be tween cylinders, so that intake manifold Is heated its entire length, assuring complete vapor isation of even the heaviest gaso line. Improved Oiling A system already highly efficient made still better. Pressure feed from fly-wheel to main bearings , and connecting rod bearings; cyl inder walls lubricated by mist from crankshaft. Cadillac 2054-56 Farnam Mo d rn o 3b il Car oT the American FexmllaV S1200 Complete Improvements Improved starting and lighting Non-stallable motor Improved ignition Left drive Larger pedal pads Rear springs semi-elliptic Longer front springs Springs self-lubricating Larger wheels Larger gasoline tank One-man type top New windshield Transmission speedometer drive Lock on ignition and lighting switches Automatic spark advance Throttle lever on steering wheel Specifications Modern Ignition Ignition from storage battery, with automatic spark advance. Type rapidly being adopted by progressive engineers. Single Unit Electrical System Generator and starting motor combined, driven by silent chain from front end of crankshaft. Supplies current for starting, ig nition and lighting. Makes motor non-stallable. Westlnghouse 12- volt system. Longer Wheelbase; More Room Wheelbase, 1 1 9 inches; tires, 34 by 4 Inches. Roomy flve-pasxen-ger body; 2 inches more leg-room In front, 7 inches more tonneau; fulf tufted upholstery; concealed door hinges, flush handles. Front springs, 37 inches long, practically flat; rear springs, seml-elllptlc, 62 inches long, swung under axle; springs self-oiling. Drakes, 14 inches in diameter.- Left Steer, Center Control Steering wheel at left; gear change and band brake levers at driver's right. Speedometer, start- Cadillac Company of Omaha Distributers Ing and lighting switches mounted flush in center of cowl board. Speedometer drive from transmis sion. Non-Glare Dimmer Headlights Hupmobile design. Upper half of headlight glass corrugated. Kills reflector glare, complying with many city ordinances and giving full illumination on road. One bulb in headlights, dimmed at will through resistance in switch. No side-lamps. ' BqiPt and Other Details 16-gallon gasoline tank In cowl; raln-vlslon windshield, fixed up rights, lower bait adjustable for ventilation. One-man type top, attaching to windshield. Crowned fenders, with flat edge and with out beading. Tall lamp exclusive Hupmobile design, illuminates license plate and entire width of road for considerable distance be hind car. Non-skid tires on rear; demountable rims; carrier at rear for spare rim and tire. Lighting and ignition switches controlled by Yale locks. Speedometer. Hupp Motor Car Company, 1229 St., Omaha, Nob. Hupmobilo Ignition and lighting switches on - ' cowl board Exclusive non-glare dimmer headlights Exclusive design tail light Improved axle shaft and hub connec tion Non-skid rear tires Illuminated speedometer Linoleum-covered running boards New style top cover New side curtains to swing open with doors Crowned fenders Heavier flywheel 14-inch brakes Concealed hinges Flush door handles inside robe rail, foot rail and cocoa mat in tonneau. Color: blue-black with maroon running gear. Price, F. O. B. Detroit, Include complete equipment. Price In Canada 11.400. F. O. B. Windsor, with complete equip ment. Model 32 Complete with A AEf A electric t a r t e r !S I llrill and lights, de- T mountable rim a, over-sice tires - 33x4 - tire carrier at rear. With regular equipment of top, windshield, gaa lamps, etc., but without special equip ment noted above, I960. Prices P. O. B. Detroit. Price in Canada, $1230. F. O. B. Windsor, including elec trical and other special equip ment noted above. Milwaukee Ave., Detroit, Mich. e