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ween ee PAGE EIGHT SWEDISH MINES | SUFFER FROM. RUHR TROUBLE : Iron Ore Trade with Germany Has Collapsed During Oc- cupancy of Ruhr AMERICA AIDS S Furnaces in France and Eng- land Not Suitable for Re- duction of Swedish Ore Kiruna, North of Arctic Circle, eden, Dec. 12.—France’s ovcu- pation of whe Ruhr, and the resu‘tant collapse of the Swedish iron ore trade with Germany, have brought! great north oused emnity | he large Arctle areas ef north Sweden and Norway which son? sron the payrolls of the fron districts for their existence. | su tyg2 wie Kirunt held used to; send arce shiploa.'s of ore daily to} the Norwegian port c. vig. At the present time there is scarcely | ( for-! a shipload a week many merly tock the grealer part of this ore. She has the furnaces to eundle it, but her purchases have 4 since the fl y in the eae ‘Englant and France hi furnaces suitable to the reduction | of the Swedish ore. The Betale-| hem Steel Company has furnac whict are capable of using this some of i, goes to Ame Sweden exported nearly 000 metric tons of iron ore in 922, and over 80 per cent of this! went to Germany. As early as 1913{ Germany bought over 3,000,000! tons of Swedish iron ore for the Ruhr furnaces. The railw hich Lulea, on the Guif of Bothni: Narvig, north of the Arctic in Norway, lives on the ore ! It hauls export ore from Kiruna to Narvig, and from Gellivare and} other mines further uth to Lut! lea. But the latte ort freex and in midwinter the export reaches t'dewater entirely through | the Norwegian «port, Narvik. Ore and Wooa pro.tucts are pra tically the only freight waich great section of Lapland affords its! single railway, which enti electrified and is the most north- ern electric railway in the world. Cities o. 10,000 people have sprung; np here in the heart of Lapland at Kiruna and _ Gellivare, mountains of iron ore are be ore, and ic | runs from| to rele} | hed by gigantic elec Is and rushed to tidewater in These di- ners at Lulea and the manner that the atter Range pours its ore into Mesalba steamers at Superior, Wisconsin for the use of furmices in Indian cr Penns) COULTER GOES TO EAST WITH FARM AID PLAN Will Seek “Accelerated tion Program” 5,000,000 For Diversifica- of N. D. co FEELS FIDENT Faigo, Dee. 12-—Congressmen and Senators from the — spr wheat states of the Northwest will learn Metin eulecat titeiind poned\ ancnlera ts ed diversification program originated at the North Dakuta Agricultural College at a con nee to be held at Washington Friday when the infor- ion will be presented to them by a committee headed by President John Lee Coulter of the Agricultural College of Fargo. President Coulter left Minot this morning for the national capital a: the request of agricultural leade:s of the states involved. ¢ plan was enlarged’ to include | more | found BY CASUAL STROLLER New York, Dec. 12. Down on the is end of Manhattan ‘Island a kvscrapper is rising. In its outer appearance it is no | different from the scores of others that raise their giant heads to the ‘sky. But this one is different, It is an artificial human being, product of the mind of man. Its | thousands of arms, far outflung, la ach from the Atlantic to the Paci- ; Through its giant skeleton of steel, | encased in flesh of brick and stone, run the nerves of wir carrying ‘their messages of joy and sorrow, of i pain and well-being, of death and f i ‘or home this skyscraper is the new of the New York ‘Telephone | Company, now under course of con- ' struction. Beneath its roof will be housed slephone equipment than is in many European coustries, enough to e ny telephones as there are in a city the size of Cincinnati. Upon seven of its acre-size floors will be bank upon bank, and row pon row of the new machine-switch- ling apparatus, which will serve 120,- 000 telephones. To handle all these phones in the completion of calls from manual stations, only 400 op- erators will be required. In the cable vaults of the four- story basement will be a tota of 432 ‘overed telephone cables ining 693,000 separate and inciv ual telephone wires, grouped in sheaths no larger than a man’s wrist. ; From this meeting place the wires! fan out #s trunk lines to cover a city |and nation, In the basement also will be a stor- e battery and charging plant c ble of furnishing enough electric current to light the homes of a large town. The batteries weigh almost tons, and contain cnough current to light 18,000 25-watt lamps for cight hours. Thirty-five motor gen- IN 1880, WHEN 15 BOYS RAN AN t at a conference held in Minn-| eupolis last week and now calls for $25,000,000 appropriation {rom Con- gress to be loaned to farmers of the} spring wheat area for the purpose of breeding stock. The maximum | load to an individual would be $1,000 | und the rate of interest six percent, | ene of which would be used for part of the administration expense, one! percent for a gua fund for the] loans and the remaining four per cent to be paid to the government for interest on the loans, « Loans would be made for a maxi- mum of five Four classes of people would be eligible for loans. These armers residing on their renters operating under r contract providing a rangement for handling Wea secured under the plan, farm owners holding suitable con- tracts with renters apd boys and girls’ club members, At the Washington conference the bill will be drafted in its final form and leaders selected to introduce it into the house and senate, Mr. Coul- ter stated before departing this morning. Confidence as to the bill's favorable reception and passage by both houses was alse voiced by Mr. Coulter, SAILSTAD ON WAY BACK HOME Napa, Calif, Dec, 12.—Edward J. Sailstad and his companion, Miss Dorothy Anderson, confessed pe: petrators of a disappearance hoax in which they burned the hoty of Allan McPhee, a friend of Sailstad, left here at 7 a. m, today for Superior, the spring wheat area in North and South Dakota, Minnesota and Mon-| Wi in éustody of Sheriff William Hagreen and Mrs. Hagreen of Doug- CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIA” Especially Prepared for Infant Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has heen in use for over 30 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcotics. Proven directions are! on each package. Physicians every-| ' TEXAS Fresh crop large ~ soft shell, Pecans, easy to crack, wholesome, sweet’ and meaty nuts— 10-LB. BAG DELIVERED TO YOU PREPAID Speciat Nute—Getistestion Gunrantess. | Save the mid bead Glemen’e orefite. Mail ebeck to Dist. Offices 306-6 Werth Bidg. “Wars Worth, Texas s and Children of All Ages | where recommend it. The kind you have always bought bears signature 1 Melek. 1 choice PECAN ASSOCIATION THIS LITTLE WORLD iy, Waitin’ TO es any a eH Uitte aes teint it 1iray nye ‘ 4 Pipes mune $e rier FP ec eg ay Us COS OPER OG ts oes q HUE YE NS REE EF Qian sists IN 1924, WHEN THE EXCHANGE! WILL OCCUPY A 20-STORY SKY- SCRAPPER. oat? bya nie ay 4 85804 erators will keep the batteries charg- ed. These generators have a 2000- horse-power capacity. Above the first seven floors will be the business and administrative of- fices where 7000 people will spend +] their working hours. Altogether the building will ve 29 stories, 404 fect high, It will rise straight for 17 stories, and then, in: accordance with the zoning laws, the remaining 12 floors will be in a set- back. A total of 680,000 square feet of working space will be provided, of which the machine-switching equip-; ire about 280,000 feet. y, indeed, has the tele- phone traveled from the day when 15 boys ran the lone switchboard of | New York. YORK (TELEPHO: EXCHANGE lass county in that state and under- sheriff J pecker of Napa county. THE BISMARCKTRIBUNE |WOULD SHIFT TO THE Before Conferencp Called In Washington — ,SAYS ACTION "4 _ tlers Causes Needed Changes | in Policies, He Says Washington, Dec.™12:—(By. the As- jated Press)—The advisory com- jmittce on Indian affairs recently ap: |pointed by the Secretary of the In- jterior as a semi-official body to as- | sist the government in Ahe solution of problems affeeting the 340,000 In- dian population of the country met jhere thday with approximately 60 of the committee's 100 members in at- tendance to consider questions of | policy. | Secretary Work in. opening the ‘meeting declared that “the passing frontier, the insistent encroachment of white settlers and jbusiness men and the builc-agaf%°railroads has | materially affected conditions as they apply to the Indian,and.made it ne- cessary for the goverment to study means for their protection and wel- fare.” | He sect forth the following ques- tions for discussion. Relation of the Indian to the gov- ernment including administration . of their affairs as affecting their con- dition, rights. and property. The admissibility of the release o Indians from government control. Improvement of the health service jincluding the advisability of and other facilities. | The centralization of many of the |Indian bureaus activities among the states having Indian population andes a plan by which the state g jernments would assume responsi ty through their boards of health, school superintendents and other agencies “for the improvement, con- | duct and supervision of restricted fn- | dians.” | Under such a plan the secretary minister only treaty rights and land ing over to the states such sums as it would otherwise spend for ser- vices to be administered by jatate. SAY “BAYER” when you, buy-Gomuine Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package ppsime Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monosceticacidester of Salleylicac! which ction proven directions, Hand: Also “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets ttles of 24 and 100—Druggists. CO WAVE Don’t worry. We for $8 monthly in: our warm garage and deliver at your home free of charge. will store your car creasing the number of physicians| INDIANDUTIES | STATES | seekahapy Work Oullines Plan} yashinkin was | years imprisonment but the supreme | 4 pep! GEN. HARDIN, Encroachment of White Set; 1 | i said, the Indian: Bureau would ad- | titles and collect Indian funds, turn- | the bg sr WIFE, ETS 6 YEARS, “AND NEW TRIAL Moscow, Dec. 12.—After living with his wife’ Yor more than 50 year: Ivan Yashinkin, a rich peasant of the Tver province, kilied her because she jrefused to make him an omelet. sentenced to six [court has ordered a review /of his } case. 3 U.S. JS. A. eae Augustine, Fla, Dee. 12— adier-General Martin Hardin, 1 U.S, A. retired, who was born in Morgan county, Illindis, 1837, died at his St. Augustine home St. =o For Colds, Influenza and asa Preventive Take ‘ The First and Cold and Grip Tablet The box bears this signature 6. klrore Price 30c. ' Think This Over ‘Ian't it reasonable to ‘suppose that the largest ; battery maker can pro- duce and sell better bat- teries at a lower figure than any other maker? ‘ Willard Batteries are the choice of 134 car manufacturers. 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