12 THE.BEE: OMAHA. ' FRIDAY APRIL 9. 1920. 1 920 FORECAST SHOWS DECREASE IN WHEAT CROP Estimated Production Is 483, 'w 7,000 Bushels, Compared to -731,636,000 Bushels During the Past Year. Washington, April 8. Production of winter wheat this yea was fore cast today at 484,617.000 bushels and rye 73.841,000 bushels by the Depart ment of Agriculture, which based its estimate on the acreage planted last December, allowing for average acreage abandonment and assuming average influence! until harvest. Condition of winter wheat April 1 was 75.6 and rye 86,8 per cent of a. normal. ' Winter wheat production last year was 731.636.000 bushels and the AIIVKBTIHEMKXT "DANDERINE" Stops Hair Coming Out; Double's Its Beauty. A few cents buys "Dmderine." After an application of "Dr.nt'crine" you can not fird a fa!len .!i;:ir or any dandruff, besides .-very IH shows new life, vlpor. Ii;-ij;!i:ns, ' More cobr ard tl".i:!:r.i'.;3, . , The New Home Treatment for Ugly Hairy Growths (Boudoir Secrets) " Here is a simple, yet very effec tive method for removing hnir and fuzz from the free, neck and. orms: Cover the objectionr.ble hair3 with a paste .mrds by mfcin some wa ter with a l'.itls 'po."dercd' draione. Leave this on for 2 or 3 m'nutes, then rub off, wash the skin and"the hairs have .vanished. No pain . or inconvenience attends this treat ment, but results will bs certain if you are sure to get real delatone. previous year 565,099,000 bushels. Kye production last year was 88. 48,000 bushels and the previous year 91,041,000 bushels. '. Conditions of winter wheat a year ago was 99.8 per cent of a' normal, two, years ago, 78.6 and the April 1 average for the last 10 years was 84.1 per cent. ' . , . 1 Condition of rye a.' year ago was 90.6 per cent of a normal, two. years ago 85.8 and the 10-ycar average 89.0. - , Pershing and Roosevelt Clash Over Mules and Neb'raskan Is Victorious Washington, April 8.--Illustrating the determination with which Per shing entered upon every duty and his unqualified success in all of his undertakings, the New York Trib une prints a story of a, meeting be tween General Pershing and ColoneJ Roosevelt while both were on thity in Cuba. ' .. "Pershing was quartermaster and adjutant of his regiment," relates the Tribune. "On the left of the Tenth happened to be the Rough Riders, commanded by Roosevelt. Mules were precious property in Cuba just then 'and Pershing-had lost two of them. Colonel Rodsevelt also had lost some mules. They both found two mules wandering in' the under brush and they found them at the same time. It was Intensely dark, too dark for variance in military rank to make; much difference. Roosevelt was sure he had found his mules and so wa Pershing:.'. I am informed tint the .conversa tion which followed there in the darkness would not. even in this enlightened age, look, pretty in print. Two strong wills clashed and a duel of words was the inevitable result. Gentlemen seldom resort to fisti cuffs, and Roosevelt and Pershing wercgentlemen. P.ut Pershing's fel low officer who told me the story pointed with some pride to the fact that Pershing got the mules. F 'il'ianzaticn Only Wav toUiilize Man Power, Trotzky Says Moscow. April 8. Militarization is the only means to fully utilize, Russia's man power, said Leon Trotzky, bolshevik minister of war. addressing the ninth convention oi line coni:iu!!i;st prrty tr.st ivK.it. J tie ; r.itdress vrs cliieSv directed to de- l fin? the relation ot; f.u mohtltsction I vt t,-e ndus'.ry to th-s' industrial re- li'ahii::at!ou of Rusria, . 1 ' irotzky dec'ared the working army, which is built on the principle of compulsory work, is no less pro ductive than Svas the old system of competition. He asserted that po litical administration - of ; railroads was "unsatisfactory, adding, however, that it was necessary because rail road workers are more conservative i in tendency than men engaged in i other branches of labor. ' The general te ,r i 'hi speech j.was in s-.-oportof cer.:r?.':2a;io!i of j pbwvr in the hands of a strong gov i errmcut ! Speculation, in Trotrky's opinion. is equivalent to desertion or com munist principles, and the onlv ef fective way to combat it is by mili tary discipline. HE COVERED E PMB In Blcfe. !lc!d And Earned, fe'ra&ak "I awoks one mcrnir.g rath tny fase covered with pirnjis3. Ihe pimples were ail scales a::d were In blotches and thsy were very large and red. They itched and I scratched them and they bvrced so that ' I could hardly sleep. I was a disgrace to go out. ' Then I used Cmicura Soap and Ointment, A f:;s sample hsljed o much that I bought r.iore. and now I am completely healed." (Signed) Miss Evelyn i'hepard, 922 E. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., April 7, 1319. Use Cutkura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for all toilet purposes. Sua r T Mall. Afr.i: "Ortlem lxtMita, Ppt 1, Malta, Kw " Sod mry- Snap'i ('!"tmll'atii.;6c. TlureSc. t&'Cuticura Soap ah.vaa witlmut auif . Stock Yards Arbiter -Says Bonus System He Put In Effect Wrong Chicago. April 8,--Jnuge Samuel Abc.'iuler, sporsor for the ' bonus system for stockyaids: workers, de clared it to be a fd'ure after he had acted as arbiter, this wee!:, in the latent yards wage dispute. He said: "Yfrk-inrrri:i Ar nnf i-Vn in : -t nrd the bonus" a? part of their i , . . . , , . . yi:y aim noncsuy oeueve t,ie em ployers do npt get credit for all the money 'th:y pay out If you ask pne of the Ynen from the yards how much he gets an hour he will tell yon. but won't refer to the bonus," Dennis Lane, international secre fary of the Amalgamated-Meat Cut ....... A TJ...-1. . i'u ou'tiiers , saia mat riii bonus looks like charity. .. j Attorney General Recovers ; At'a-.ta. Ga.. Ap-i! S.-Attorney ! General .Palmer., who' was stricken ; at Gainsvilfe Tucst'ay with ,-n at- j tack ot acute indirection, arr.ved here Wednesday, right apparently recovered and will continue his speaking schcdulein Georgia. ' ' mi in Body and Mind ' Nevermind your age as measured by years. How do you feel? That's the thing that counts! See this sprightly old gentlemen coming toward you down the street. His birth record would show you that he is past seventy. But judging from the easy, grace with which he swings along, his errect carriage, his ruddy complexion, the keen glance of his eye, his whole appearance the very picture of health, you would say that he is not a day past fifty. He is young m spite of his three score years and ten. ' More frequently you see the opposite of his type. Men scarcely hi their thirties- haggard, listless, wealc, nervous men who take no interest in tffe, just dragging out a weary existence, all in, tired and worn out Though young in years, they are, nevertheless, eld men. Their vital farces are on the wane. They've lost their "punch" and "pep." They Ualotd and thev look it! , , u , stay young by Keeping your Body fit Keep stomach, bowels. liver, kidneys and bladder healthy and active Build up your strength and health. Nothing will accomplish these results better than The Great General Tonic Jutt try -tYKO- wbn tm an fetlina- the jrattbit iadL tirad and warn oat Se. for wiwlfhow quickly it wjuye. itM- irhat s fmh foalin of stransth and power uvea too It a reliable eppetiaer. apiendkj id to diceetion. ba. aiila tvmdfl to itrenCMWn ana wnw wm wm.. wm?. YirSSSt taT-XVKO.r Get.bott etoda,. for the nan on the packs and accept no aoM utute. Sole Maauf actnren LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY lyicouu. New York -' Kaaaa ur, Me. RiuMUtubniiuua. For aala by Beaten Drug Co., 15th and Fa mam St., kb1 all retail draggitU. Look TIIURLES, STORM CENTER FOR ALL REVOLT CRIMES - Twelve Murders Have Dis turbed Quiet of Richest. Farming Provinces In Last Six Months. By JQHN STEELE. Near Terk Tlmea-Chlraco Tribnne Cable, Coprrlcht, 1W0. Thurles. County Tipperary, April 8. This little town of 4,000 people in the heart of one of the richest cattle districts'of. Ireland is a storm renter of political unrest In less than six months it has been ; th: scene of 12 murder?, half of whom Vvcrc policemen and halt civilians. There is little doubt but that the po lice were murdered by Sinn Fein extremists. The Sinn Feiners sav the police murdered the,half dozen civilians; the police say it was done by the inner circle of the Sinn Fein. Thurles lies half way between Cork and Dublin, and I stopped off to try to find out why this peaceful little town, capital of an archdiocese of the same name, possessor of one of the finest Irish cathedrals and residence of one of the ablest. s?.intliest archbishops in the Irish hierarchy, had become notorious throughout the world ' Excesses Are Disgusting. . Here, as elscwhere.vl found mod erate men, although the Irish re publicans are disgusted by the ex cesses of the extreme wing and are deploring the crimes. From the most influential man in the diocese I learned that the first exasperation of popular feeling be gan a year ago, when Pierce Mc Car.n, M. P., of this district, and one of fhenin-it reneeted residents, died ! in an English prison, where he had been sent in connection with an al leged German plot. Archbishop Harty has denounced the crimes time afr time and daily pleaches on patience and modera tion, to the people, but the campaign of murder continues and responsible opinion in the town holds it, is the work of a few wild spirits. Policemen Ostracized. In Thurles. like Cork, the police koccupy barracks only in large par ties armed with ritles ana revolvers. Even the men lounging outside the barrack door today, as is the habit in all Irish towns," bad revolvers at their belts. District Inspector Golden, succes sor to the murdered Hunt, said no one in the town dare speak to a po liceman or sell him food, drink or anything else. The men were thrown entirely on their own socie ty. Golden was unable to buy manure for a garden' or to get a man to work it. All the food for himself a;id family is brought from other places. Bee Want Ads Are Best Business Eoosters. DENY AMUNDSEN HAS LEFT VESSEL FOR DASHTO POLE Norwegian Geographical So ciety Declares He Will Fol low Nansen's Idea Before ' Starting His Dash. thlraco Trlbnne-Omaha Bee Leaned Wire. Washington, April 8. Capt. Ronald Amundsen, discoverer of the South Pole, and now leader of a North Polar expedition has not left his ship, the "Maude" for a final dash to the pole. The denial of the recent report from London that the Amundsend dash had actually be gun was received in Washington to day by Gilbert Grossvcrnor,. presi dent of the National Geographic so ciety, in a cablegram from the Nor wegian Geographical society. According to the earlier report from Christiania published ,in Lon don on March 26, the explorer be pan the dash across the polar ice field accompanied by only two men. Had this report proved true, Amundsen's dash if successful might have brought him to his goal on the same' day of the year on which the oole was discovered by Peary, April 6 1909. Geographers, who are familiar with Captain Amundsen's plan will not be surpti'ed at the denial of the report that he has left his ship for bucli a departure, as this would be contrary to. all the plans of his ex pedition. When he left Norway in July, 1918, it was Amundsen's intention to allow the "Maude" to be frozen in the ice, following Nansen's example in 189J. Xansen was frozen into the ice September 22, 1893, and not until March H, 1895, did he reach a point where he decided to leaYe his ship 400 miles from the goal. But this distance' was too great for a suc cessful dash to the pole. May Stay Until 1921. Profiting by Nansen's experience, Amundsen did not intend to leave his ship so far from his goal. It was generally estimated that the drift across the polar seas would take three years, therefore, barring unforeseen circumstances, it is not probable that the leader of the pres ent expedition will leave his ship for a dash to the pole until 1921. The coming summer months prob ably will be spent in drifting, and if the currents and ice behave as they , did with Nansen's ship, the "Fram," the "Maude" by next spring will be brought to a point from which Amundsen can strike1 for the pole with every hope of success. "Pussyfoot" Coming Back. Westerville, O., April 8. William E. (Pussyfoot) Johnson, Anti-Saloon league leader.' who "gave an eye to make England dry," is com ing back to the United States this month, according to a cablegram re ceived by E. H. Cherrington, league official. Foster Son of Kit Carson r Dies at Soldiers' Home Los Angeles, April 8. Lewis C. Shilling., scout, guide, foster son of Kit Carson, associate of Davy Crockett and Col. James Bowie, and member of GenJohiv C. Fremont's California expedition, died at the National Soldiers' home at Sawtcllo, near here. He was 88 vears old. Fire at Aviation Camp Causes $1,000,000 Loss . Dallas, Tex., April 8. Several airplanes, large .supplies oC lumber, the engine house building and the unloading sheds at the army avia tion repair depot, north of Dallas, were destroyed by fire eA'V wn" The loss was estimated by army officers at $1,000,000. r?"H a nTftf jav av ' bllliJi j PINT CANS I f Larger sixes cheaper per lb. R kcOOlNoyl IN frying, Mazola does not smoke up your kitchen. The smoking point of Mazola is far above the temperature needed for proper cooking. You use the same lot of Mazola again and again It always remains abso lutely free of flavors of the food cooked in it. Corn Product Refining Co. P.O. Boa 161 NewYrCit OA Lartan & Jefirey Co. 408 South 12th St. Omaha, Neb. ' ' IiS" ' ' ' ' tf: -the Staff of Life and T.Icthsr knew many ways to serve it, and when Mother made jTench toast" on Sunday mornings ---ft In Mother 's L.a. . tlicre was a gener ous portion of that "never - to-be-had-tff-again" ingredi-e-'. -HfrLher's love. How we would stuff our little stomachs. Gee, those were wonderful breakfasts. And do you recaU the way Dad would let out his belt as he tackled the last piece, with rather a reluctant expression on his face, that he was not going to be able to get away with more? ' 'Dad used to say Mother worked too hard, and that it was fool ish to go to so much trouble over breakfasts on Sunday morn ings, 'cause we all had to hurry off to church anyway. But ,do you remember how Mother would give us kkldies the wink and say nothing? It didn't matter to Mother about the work she did. Her whole life, her every happiness, came when she could watch us young sters stuffing ourselves with the things she was able to make us in her kitchen. ( It was Mother who set the bread standards of the world. In . every btif of Mother's bread she put that generous portion of Mother's Love, that today nothing takes its place. Mother knew hundreds of ways of serving breads so that our little mouths would fairly water in anticipation of the goodies. French toast, country sausage and brown syrup was only one of these but, Gee, how we loved it. Today the bread baking is done in. the bakeries. Here the standards that Mother set years ago are always the cherished aims. We make Tip Top and Hard Roll Breads so good that your, enjoyment in them will bring back those good old memo rips of Mother's Bread. Order a loaf today, and see how close ve hate come to those standards which your Mother left for us. These suggestions are for your Sun day luncheons Caviar Sandwiches are un usually good for light lunch eons. Spread half slices of bread with caviar, season with pepper or cayenne and a little lemon juice. Press the . remaining slices of bread over these and cut into long narrow finger-shaped sand wiches, j A most delightful luncheon sandwich is that using ground olives and chopped pecans, well mixed with mayonnaise, a crisp lettuce leaf and spread between two trimmed thin slices of buttered bread. Lobster butter makes a fine filling. Rub the lobster meat in a bowl, adding butter until it Is of creamy consistency, add cayenne and salt to taste and spread on thin trimmed slices of bread. infiitl on Icnowi'n i rV to whoro uour Dread comes from one of these amous brands Ike udkel will project iou Petersen & Pegau Baking Co.