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Gr HARaarew> &e PAGE TEN | “Conditions during the last grow- ing season in the state were very fa- | vorable for the development of | sinut,” he said, referring to the ex- ‘cessive moisture during the latter {half of the season. “Losses to North |Dakota wheat growers from smut CONSTRUCTION year amount to eral million 4 ‘alcue| “Estimates from elevator man- Asks Party Program Caleu-) oro and county agents. show that o Promote Welfare | 77.6 per cent of the farmers 0} ede North Dakota treated their sec of Country |phasize the nec y of treating | wheat in the spring for smut pre- vention. dollars. These 1c ve to em- ring. F ical, about three times as many COOPERATE WITH HOOVER farmers using this as those using copper carbonate.” Does Not Regard Defeat as NORWAY HERDS Impairing Principles of | ace GQ MAD FROM New York, Nov. 14.— (P) — After | broadcasting an appeal to the Dem-| MYSTERY ST ocratic party to develop and pre-| sent to congress a constructive n tional program, Governor Alfred | Smith today was intent on golf in| the south. i} Accompanied by a few friends he will have a two weeks’ vacation near Biloxi, Miss. | The governor in his speech, which, Beasts Resembling Guinea Pigs Drive Livestock to Devour- ing Meat was broadcast over 38 radio sta-|, Oslo, Norway, Nov. 14.-Gan you tions, also urged that Herbert Pia te ee » mad ie thi dil a a MT not men. forsake their vegetable diet for Hoover—although he did not men-' sesh meat? In Stavanger, Norway, tion him by name—be given the co- | !t¢ operation of every citizen in the de- guia Wy haprenss this 1 velopment of a program calculated | About every sixty years this. lo- to promote the welfare and best in-| ality is overrun with a mysterious terest of the country. | migration of millions of tiny animals Urges National Uni {called lemmings. ‘These little beasts “It must be remembered,” said the Change the cows of Stavanger from governor, “that while political par-|'™ild_and complacent animals into THE BISMAR CK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1928 ties. may seriously divide public T@ging creatu’ opinion throughout the country dur- ing the progress of ‘a campaign, after the American people have made their decision the man selected is not the president of the Republi- can party, but is the president of the United States. “He is the president of all the people and as such he is entitled to the cooperation of every citizen in the development of a program cal- culated to promote the welfare and best interests of this country. He is entitled to a fair opportunity to develop such a program. Only when he fails to accomplish it does the administration become the subject of proper criticism of the opposition party.” The governor denied the election was a “crushing defeat” for the Democratic party, which he asserted was still “a live, a vigorous and a forceful major minority party.” Party Is Necessary The existence of sv¢h a party he declared necessary to serve as a check upon the majority party. Governor Smith asserted he did not regard the defeat as impairing in the slightest degree the sound- ness of the principles for which the Democratic party stands. “I am just as anxious to see them succeed as I was when the party honored me with the nomination, and with all the vigor that I can command I will not only stand for them but I will battle for them.” MILLIONS LOST IN SMUT GRAIN) ‘ne-Fifth of Northwest Grain in Minneapolis Graded Smutty North Dakota wheat growers lost several million dollars through smut in the last season, according to in- formation received by E. G. Booth of the state agricultural college at Fargo. “One-fifth of the cars from the northwest received at Minneapolis were graded as smutty,” Booth said. “Smutty cars totaled 16.4 per cent in 1925, 11.0 per cent in 1926, 12.3 per cent in 1927, and 20.5 per cent this year up to September 30.” Indications are, Booth declared, the final total for 1928 will be about 1 per cent smaller, as previous ex- perience shows that earlier ship- ments contain relatively more smut. The lemming looks like a small | guinea pig dipped in yellow. With }small eyes, tiny feet and a mere | wisp of a tail, he appears harmless. | But he has a set of mean little teeth that look as if they could gnaw through anything. With them he |spares nothing. | Everything vege- | table that comes his way he devours, | roots and all. | When Mr. Lemming begins to jchew the grass in the pastures around Stavanger, the cows parade | into town as a protest. But the townspeople give the poor cows scant sympathy. Chased from the | gardens where they have nibbled at | flower and vegetable, the nervous beasts return to the fields ready for war, Forced to Eat Meat They rage and stamp on the little creatures and actually chew them up. Whether the cows relish this sud- den change in diet is doubtful, it being more likely that they act only | in revenge. But that doesn’t stop the lemming. | After propagating a large family |and eating everything around him he moves into the next field where | he and his descendants continue their | destruction. |. The migration of the Norwegian | lemming is one of the most astonish- ing of nature’s mysteries. They are never seen between migrations. Suddenly and from no apparent source the little beasts appear in the mountains behind Stavanger. They begin to multiply so rapidly that the mountains soon swarm with them. | Then the migration begins. It is peculiar from any other migration in nature in that these animals move in an absolutely straight line from the mountains to the sea. Steadily, for two or three years this vast army of more than 300,000,000 eats its way over the land, ending its de- structive career by drowning in the sea. Rodents Go Straight On Nothing on land can stop them. Driven by some powerful instinct each one follows his own straight path. They never go around anything. If they come to a mountain they climb over it. If it’s a river be- fore them they swim it. When they arrive at the sea they plunge in. The same powerful in- stinct that dove them over the land drives them to swim out to sea. Onward they swim until they either lose strength and drown or become a fat meal for some hungry fish. They have been seen out as far as nine miles swimming hopefully on. No one has been able to discover where the lemmings come from and never before Bisma: Everywhere they say “the New Buick is un- rivaled in performance” Motorists everywhere are turn- Buick with an enthusiasm automobile. Why? . . . Super- lative beauty and style, match- less comfort, and utterly new and unequaled performance. uick | Fleck Motor Sales, Inc, ‘Whsn Bottee Actomsblies Aso Bell « accorded any ek, N. Dak « Beles Wil Belk, Them Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, left, and Kermit Roosevelt are on their way to Indo-China for another hunting trip. It’s not the Ovis Poli that they’ll stalk this time, but the Boat Goat, another rare beast. Here you see the mighty hunters as they sailed, Kermit in a dinner coat, his‘ brother carrying one tiny piece of luggage. it is as much of a mystery among! agement to find such fine coopera-| naturalists to determine where they | tion and a happy understanding be- | are trying to go. A Norwegian|tween the military establishment legend of the sixteenth century tells | and the community as exists there. | us that the lemmings drop from |The tribute to me, I feel, is evidence | heaven or at least from some cloud. | of the esteem in which the army in! Summerail Writes Thanks to A. of C. for Welcome Here Saying “it is always a source of encouragement to find such fine co- opetation and a happy understand- ing between the military establish- ment and the community as exists in Bismarck,” Major General Charles Pelot Summerall has writ- ten to the local Association of Com- merce thanking them for the recep- tion planned here in his honor. Major General Summerall visited Bismarck and Fort Lincoln October 29 on an inspection tour and a ban- quet in hig honor was given under your midst is held by the good peo- ple of Bismarck. Sincerely yours, Cc. P, SUMMERALL, Major General, Chief of Staff. EQUALITY, NOT SUPERIORITY} London, Nov. 14.—(P)—The need | jof the day, in the opinion of Lady | Astor, is a society for the encour- agement of men who fear equality with women. “They need not be frightened,” she encouraged. “We do not ask for superiority. We have always had that. We only want equality.” COUGHED NIGHT AND DAY John Vognue, Elberton, Ga., says: | “I coughed night and day until my) throat was raw and hoarse. Finally | I began taking Foley’s Honey and the auspices of the Association of | Commerce. The letter from the chi of the United States Ar was received by S. W. Corwin, pres- ident of the association, followse Dear Mr. Corwin: Upon my return to Washington from my tour of inspection, which included the day spent at Fort Lin- coln, I am very glad of the oppor- tunity to express to you again in better form my appreciation for the luncheon given in my honor and sponsored by your association. Tar Compound, my condition im- of staft| Proved at once, and I was soon as 4 which | Well as ever. Its very name gave me confidence that it would help me; and it did.” Best for coughs, colds, croup, bronchial coughs and even whooping cough. Effective alike for children and grown. per- isons, "No opiates. Sold everywhere, —Adv. with fertilizer. phone 62. Improve that lawn, cover; Wachter’s, | ‘A-Hunting We Will Go LEAGUE'S WORK a i | IS DELAYED BY | | NAVY PROBLEM {Size of Cruisers and Subma- rines Provides Present Dead- lock in Disarmament ACTION IS DEMANDED New Formula Is Ssught by Leaders as U. S. Rejects Anglo-French Plan Geneva, Nov, 14.—(AP)—Inex- orably the League of Nations has learned that when it tackles. the su- preme problem of national defense it is treading on delicate grotind. League leaders, which is another way of saying governmental lead- ers, will tell you that disarmament must be faced squarely as the greatest of all world problems, with due regard to its difficulties and without fear of fuilure. They will tell you this because there is a growing and insistent de- mand from the peopled of the world that some start be made on the road to disarmament. The people are convinced that an uncurbed arma- ment race will lead to war and they feel that they have had enough of war. Millions of men and women, scattered over two-score of nations, told the league this recently, either through memorials presented by various committees or through visits of delegations to the president of the league assembly Navy Size Problem For the moment it is the failure of great naval powers to agree upon methods of limiting navies which is holding up the league’s disarma- ment business. There is no ques- tion for the moment of filling in what Paul Boncour, the eminent French statesmen, recently called the blank spaces of the disarma- ment treaty. That will come at the actual conference on reduction of armaments when nations will asked to specify just how many warships they require and_ what sizé armies and air fleets they deem requisite for their national defense. Everybody knows that when it comes to putting down cold figures there will be trouble and compli- cations enough. That is why the |nations do not want to call a con- ference until the preliminaries have been carefully agreed upon and success of the conference assured as far as it is humanly possible to do so. Issues Complicated The present deadlock is due to thé fact that the nations are not in 1L10US : Take NR -NATURE’S REMEDY— tonight, You'll be “ftand fine” by morning tongue clear, headache gone, it back, bowels acting pleasantly, bilio tack forgotten. For constipation, too. ter than any mere laxative, Only 25c. Safe, mild, purely vegetable— TO-NIGHT TOMORROW ALRIGHT mended and Sold by It is always a source of encour- All four, Bismarck druggists. Four-Door Sedan 5395 : Distributor 116 Second Street FOUR-DOOR SEDAN - $1395 M. O. STEEN COUPE - °875 PE i apg a go! or AX titnce Roval Eight! Because it looks like a million dollars .... Because ft ee a) the rem a quality-si it 's qualit ile ERE’S a Six that stands out from —long, in, rugged and power- therankandfileofitspriceclass ‘ful, And it’s equipped with West- likethedrum-majorofaband. Styled —_inghouse Vacuum Brakes and “One right up to the next tick of the Shoe? And so powerful there's nothing Just compare! . com, le. A six that appeals to 8 one Wartiog ee. See A new Big Six 91525 that appeals to your ent i Come take its measure! A new Royal Eight 85 ©1795 All Prices t.0.b. Factory Phone 1452 CLEVELAND, OHIO | To Make Debut An interesting event of New York’s early winter social season will be the debut of Miss Virginia Clayton Willys, daughter of John N. Willys, automobile manufacturer of Toledo, O. For a year Miss Willys has been traveling in various parts of the world with her parents, naval experts must begin all over again and strive to find some form- ula which wil' be acceptable to all the great naval powers, for every- body knows it would be folly to con- voke an international conference when nations are still without agreement as to just what warships are to be treated at the conference. Principals of Race for District Judge Pay Bismarck Visit J. A. Coffey, incumbent fourth district judge, and R. G. McFarland, two Jamestown men who figured in one of the closest races ever staged for judge in this district, are both in Bismarck today on business and for visits. McFarland, according to the latest unofficial general election returns, was victorious over Coffey by ap- proximately 600 votes November 6. “As far as I know, further returns will not change the standing of the figures in the race,” McFarland said this morning. “It was a hard race. and it seems that I have been elected with only one precinct in McLean county remaining to be heard from.” Coffey refused to make any state- ment concerning the election. od Both men are expected to remain in the city for a day or two. BINA DAMAGE = IS $18,600,000 Catania, Sicily, Nov. 14—(7)— The loss caused by the torrant oF molten lava pouring from Mount Etna today was estimated at about $18,500,000. Work on reconstruction was being planned, with the complete cessation of the eruption predicted within two or three days. | The damage estimates included $8,500,000 for devastation of forests, $3,000,000 for destruction of agri- cultural lands, and $2,500,000 for in- terruption of traffic and consequent loss to commerce. Destruction ‘of buildings, roads, bridges, railways, and telephone and telegraph lines made up the balance. : Director Malladra of the Vesuvi obseryatory said that unless some thing unforeseen occurs there will be a complete cessation of Mount Etna’s activity within two or three days. ‘STAY ALIVE CLUB’ New York, Nov. 14.—()—The Stay Alive Club of America, newly incorporated, seeks to keep members. from being killed or killing anybody else. Twenty million motorists will be invited to join. agreement as to just what types of| cruisers and submarines should be | subjected to a limitation or reduc- tion agreement. France and Great Britain reached a tentative accord that, for the present, efforts should | be restricted to an agreement on cruisers carrying guns of more than ; six inch calibre and submarines of | over 600 tons displacement. This practically means that the eight-inch | gun cruiser would be limited; also ocean-going submarines. However, Excess acid is the common cause of indigestion. It results in pain and sourness about two hours after the United States has found this idea unacceptable on the ground that it would not curb an armament race, since it would render possible an unrestricted building of small cruis- ers and submarines, which, in the American view, possess offensive power. As the Anglo-French plan has been rejected by the United States, even as a basis of discussion, the eating. The quick corrective is an alkali which neutralizes acid. The best corrective is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. It has remained standard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention, One spoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia neutralizes instantly many times its volume in acid. It is harm- less and tasteless and its action is quick, You will never rely on crude’ methods, never continue to suffer, when you learn how quickly, how pleasantly this premier method acts. Please let it show you—now. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia prescribed hy physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 25c¢ and 50c a bottle —any drugstore. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of Theg Charles H. Phillips Chemical Com-' pany and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875.—Adv. half-million TO THE half-million men and wo- men who have received new Fords in the last eleven months, there is no need to dwell on the perform: ance of the car. You have tested its speed on the open road. In traffic you have noted its quick acceleration and the safety of its brakes. You know how it climbs the hills. On long trips and over rough stretches you have come to appreciate its easy- ‘ viding comfort. Continuous driv- ing has proved its economy of operation and low cost of up- keep. This is an invitation to you to take full advantage of the service facilities of the Ford dealer organ- ization so that you may continue to enjoy many thousands of miles of carefree, economical motoring. The point is this, You have a great car in the new Ford. It is simple in design, constructed of the best materials and’ machined with unusual accuracy. It is so well-made, in fact, that it requires surprisingly little attention. Yet that doesn’t proper care. dealer every and greasing a great deal ‘the hood. equipped to To the first new Ford owners mean it should be neglected. Like every other fine piece of machinery, it will serve you better and‘ longer if given One of the best ways to do this is to take your car to the Ford 500 miles for oiling and a checking-up of the little things that have such a great bearing on long life and con- tinuously good performance, Such an inspection may mean to your car. To you it means thousands upon thou- sands of miles of motoring with- out a care—without ever lifting Ford dealers everywhere have been specially trained and service the new Ford. You will find them prompt and reliable in their work, fair in their help you get the greatest possible use from your car for the longest period at a minimum of trouble and expense. That is the true’ meaning of Ford Service. FORD MOTOR COMPANY = Ww