The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1936, Page 8

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“apg, feeds such as poultry foods, calf meal and dairy rations. This is done divisions had to face an onslaught by in still a third department where the|/42 German divisions. The Fifth feeds going into the various formulas] army suffered terrible losses. It fell are welghed and carried into the! back for miles, but fought grimly over automatic mixer by elevators. This|every inch. There is no finer story BEST FACILITIES ARE CONTAINED IN BiG NEW BUILDING Dacotah Seed Company Shows i i British justice—concerning which Confidence in Agricultural these islanders always proudly preen Outlook of Area Plant One of Most Efficient | aired these days in the press. In the meantime the main figure—Sir Hu- in Country ee silence, But he is being deluged with Opening of the new plant of the Da-/| letters and telegrams congratulating votah Seed Co, still further enhances | him upoh what is already looked upon the importance of Bismarck as a|as a belated vindication. commercial center serving the inter- ests of the surrounding farm com- munity. And in this case the sur-| porn in 1870 of a military famtly—had rounding community includes all of!, fine early career. He served with a ; credit in the South African war. He The company’s new building, con-| was in command of the cavalry at the structed to replace the one burned Ireland in M lest winter, 1s 178 fee: and 6 inches |CUT@8n In freland on Mare 2 = the time of the famous Western North Dakota. long and of varying width, the ir- Yegular design being necessary be- cause of the operations to be carried on within tt. It is underlaid with a full basement and in some places reaches a height of three stories. The office is 24 by 32 feet in size and here will be displayed samples | Many There was a political upset in the in small-lot sales also wili be done| cabinet. the resignations of the army there, men were withdrawn and Gough. among others, went back into the ‘The seed cleaning department is | service. of the various Items sold by the com- pany. An over-the-counter business Process Is Automatic 36 by 48 feet in dimension and three Stories high. Seed to be cleaned can| War in 1914 and by 1918 was in com- be brought to it from the nearby ele-|mand of the Fifth Army. He had to vator through pipes and the whole| protect a front of 42 miles with cight process is aulomatic. The cleaned] ivisions. His Intelligence Service in- seed also is handled by automatic! formed him the Germans were mass- machinery. ing troops for a break-through on his The feed-grinding department is 18] front. Gough appealed for more men. by 24 feet in size and also 50 feet|He was given grudgingly four more high. Bins for the storage of the/divisions. His demand for still more ground products are located in the/ fell on the deaf ears of Foch, of the basement. British General Headquarters and of } One of the important operations} his government at home. performed in the plant is that of mix- is one of the most technical parts of | ; the business and the feeds are mixed| War, By March 28 the retreat ceased and the main force of the German at-|, | , out by experts in animal nutrition | +,°4 quieted down. General Gough| Paris: so were the Channel ports; 50 was called home and was replaced by} was France; so was England. Where- General Rawlinson, By that time, the government had found plenty of t conform with the formulas worked and filed with the state regulatory department. Cracked Specially Some idea of how this is done can ‘be gleaned from the fact that three different sizés of cracked corn are used in these mixtures. The corn is ¢racked by @ special machine in the | derstood thet he would be granted an, Lloyd George has belatedly done so. aapment, inquiry. because of the speech | He was the Premier of the cabinet B Pee earning run iover in Parliament by Lloyd George, then Premier?’ who said: screens which separate it int®three different, bins. ~All heavy machinery, such as the corn sheller and two feed grinders| re explained it would be unfair to! day, he wrote Gough a letter in which ere located in the basement. One of | censure General Gough. But until/ ne said: blindfold and after eighteen long years right a wrong that thousands of CLEANS SEED, GRINDS FEED men in and out of the British Fifth ————————— Army think was done to General Sir Automatic Machinery Makes /| Hubert Gough? | The Liberal government, then in power, contemplated having to use the army to quell anti-home rule agi- tation In Ulster. Officers at the Cur- ragh were given the option of obey- ing orders to this effect or resigning. A Hero i ese & + * London, Dec, 5.—(NEA)—Will that themselves—take off its symbolical That is a question that is being bert himself—maintains a dignified In Irish Incident | Here are the facts: Sir Hubert— 1914, at ident.” particularly those of Ulster resigned. Gough led in this. He went to the front in the World 42 Divisions Against 12 On March 21, 1918, his devoted 12 in the British record of the World troops to send to the hard-pressed line. Gough was the scapegoat. The unfortunate general had un- “Until all the circumstances . . . the grinders is a hammermill which|the circumstances are cleared up, it crushes the grain, the other is a ma-| Would be equally unfair to the Bri-| which have come to my knowledge chine with knives which cuts the|tish army to retain him in the field.” | since the war, have completely chang- feeds, this being desirable for certain formulas. The hammermill is equip- ped with a magnetic separator to re-|!nquiry. He resigned from the army | jet down and no General could have | move from the grain any such parti-| and is today a director of various bus-! won that battle under the conditions cles of metal as may be present in it.|iness firms in The City—London’s| in which you were placed.” Turned to Business Gough never had the benefit of the A corn-drying unit is located near the | Wall Street. Bying, who commanded seed-cleaning department, the drying]the Third Army, Plumber, who com- Process being facilitated by artificial | manded the Second, Horne, who com- heat. manded the First, and Rawlinson, The plant is equipped to do custom | who commanded the Fourth, were all grinding while the farmer waits.) given peerages and Parliamentary Grain may be unloaded from a truck | grants of $150,000 each for their serv- or wagon into a chute in the side of | ices. Gough got nothing. He was al- the building which carries it to the eral Gough, Belatedly Freed of Blame for Loss of Vital World War Battle n Defeat Peerage Is Suggested for Great Britain’s Gen- General Gough lowed to remain with a cloud on his military name. i But some of these, who were in various cabinets and who wrote books, did much to vindicate him. The late Lord Birkenhead said: “If one soldier more than another was direct~ ly responsible for our victory in 1918 it was General Gough . . . Luden- dorff's last throw had patently failed Amiens was saved; so was upon Gough was recalled.” Lloyd George Vindicates Him Winston Churchill, likewise, wrote in praise of Gough. Last and, possibly, most important, which recalled Gough. In his war Memoirs, he has handsomely vindi- cated Gough. Moreover, the other “I need hardly say that the facts, ed my mind as to the responsibility for that defeat. You were completely It is being suggested to the present cabinet that it would be a good move if, before his coronation next May, King Edward VIII were urged to con- fer a belated peerage upon General Gough, thus emphasizing that a long chapter of injustice had been defi- nitely ended. grinders. When the processed grain comes out of the grinder it is re-| Swift Military Help turned to the wagon box through an cverhead elevator system. The whole process requires only a short time and Manager H. R. Smith expects this service to prove popular. Offer Custom Mixing Custom mixing to meet individual|Prance Friday, in the event of un- feed formulas also can be done but| provoked aggression. Foreign Minister this service is not being emphasized|Yyon Delbos, addressing the French since few care to take advantage of jchamber of deputies, recalled Foreign it, he said. Minister Anthony Eden’s promise of Much of the big building is given over to storage of bulky raw ma-/nounced: “I declare similarly that terlals and the finished product. AJall the forces of France, on land, sea, flour warehouse, 20 by 24 in size, 15)and air, would spontaneously and im- given Bee pie eioraae ey Sapphire mediately be used for the defense of flour, m: y the Montana Flour! Great Britain inst Mills Co., at Great Falls, Montana, | aggressi pee | which is being introduced in Bis- Tarck by the Dacotah Seed Co. ‘The main warehouse is 36 by 90 feet and is one of the few parts of the|striking WPA employes, their number Plant which is not entirely new. A new roof was placed over it this year and the floor will be further repaired in the spring. Elevator Repaired The elevator of 20,000 bushels ca- pacity is used only in connection with the company’s other operations. It also was salvaged from the fire, al- though some repairs were required because of damage done by the blaze. During its normal operations the company will employ about six men ‘with a greatly increased staff during the rush season. ‘The company took over the busi- hess done by the Washburn Coal company on Oct. 1 but this is being handled as a separate division of its enterprise, although it is under , Smith's Management. Lee Appointed Logan - Welfare Secretary f Dec, 5— —Ben H. Lee, for- amer administrator and execu- “tive secretary of the Sheridan county ‘welfare board, has been sppoin' Promised by France| Paris, Dec. 5.—(?)—Swift military ald to Great Britain and Belgium— on land, sea and air—was pledged by British support to France and an- END SIT-DOWN STRIKE New York, Dec. 5.—(#/—A group of reduced by 25 to 125, ended a one-day sit-down strike Friday and marched out of the office building where they had camped, singing the Interna- (Mrs. K. S. Omdahl, 67, Is Buried at Regent Regent, Dec, 5.—Rites were held here for Mrs. K. 8. Omdahl, 67, and inter- ment was made in the Black Butte cemetery. Mrs. Omdahl had been in ill health for two weeks and was a patient at the Dickinson hospital. She was born in Norway in 1869 and lived there until 20 years ago. when she immigrated to the United States. She was married to Mr. Omdahl at Crookston in 1930, She also leaves one brother in Norway. DIES OF SCARLET FEVER Hettinger, Dec. 5.—Funeral services were held here for Anita Reister, 6- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C, Reister, who died of scarlet fever. Forty per cent of our daily airplane mileage is traveled at night. The United States has 90 per cent of the tionale. world’s lighted airways. Dacotah marck’s facilities, community well. We Extend to You Our Sincere . Congratulations and Best Wishes You have built a fine new seed house. It is a worth-while addition to Bis- North Dakota Power & Light Co. Seed Co. LARIMORE WOMAN and will serve the Everett, Wash., Dec. 5.—()—The $260,000 estate of Eugene B. McGill. Everett business man, who died in September, 1935, became the subject of a court controversy Friday after| The Poets’ Corner of Westiminster Rosa McGill of Larimore, N. D., filed a petition stating she was McGill's wife and demanding a declaratory judgment establishing her rights in the estate. In his will, McGill named Julia McGill of Everett as his wife and left | The petitioner said she and McGill’ were married July 4, 1888, in Lang- Everett Businessman’s Estate |don, nN. D., and never divorced, She Center of Fight Between Two ‘Wiv declared she'is the grandmother of Philip Eugene, John Daniel and Rose- mary Golden, the children in Rich- mond, Va., for whose education a $25,- 000 trust fund was left in the will. Her petition was made returnable |CCDY: Dec. 21. Hines Page, Yow’re Invi to the Grand Opening of the New Modern Home of DACOTAH SEED COMPANY All Day Wednesday---December 9 | Come as early as you desire and stay as late as you desire We Offer Many Services in Our Modern Plant With Latest Machinery 1. We will continue all our former services. We will continue in the wholesale and retail business, custom grinding and mixing of feeds. 3. We will manufacture poultry and dairy feeds. We are in the market for buying grain. 5. See us before buying or selling seed. SPECIAL PRICES LL PREVAIL dante DAY WEDNESDA Paul Bitz, Mate Noel, Ted and dears ‘Wald, all on biatatry chee Pu Pooled Fund Plan Is N ew Seed Plant Will “Aid Bismarck’s Service to ces District Court Term jin seers at Linton Linton, Dec. 5h seven criminal ‘aci calendar of the Emmons county dis- !ton; Adam Kenna of pagent ‘presiding. Hing eos a * leredited to their particular employer. battery. 5.—()—Governor- Jurymen serving during the term jelect Elmer A. Benson said Friday | program are John Wagnef and E. M. Klein, /he would recommend an unemploy- |drouth stricken regions. Strasburg; sce Eien Savoah eee ment insurance bill under which em- 80 Attendance Prizes--Valued at More. Than. $200° Practical merchandise, including tons of coal, sacks of flour, sacks of feed, ete., will be given absolutely free to certain of our visitors. Drawings will be conducted: under the auspices of the Bismarck Association of Commerce. - Don’t miss out on this fun. Free Hot Luncheon Served All Day. Lene For the comfort and entertainment of our guests, we will serve hot coffee and doughnuts all day long. We will have plenty on hand, 80 don’t be too: bashful about dropping into our new establishment. a pill will be Mdsis 5 disse pad Alles Lips aoe: Benson said his proj Pp ee Prank Meier, Jr, Valentine Kelsch, of the “pooled fund type ate ath Ted Fiocher, Rage Kuntz, Ferdinand |the “reserve account” Fala by ,|the pooled fund plan, all payment 4 mployers would go into one central fant to be used to pay unemployment = insurance to all workers, no matter who employs them. Under the reserve accoun| otkers receive bene- John J; ‘ated it system, Dole Of the fund PREPARE conn ie ul Washington, Dec. 5.—(7)—: 2 tural Seapine spokesmen said Fri- burglary, and tnd Preferred t by Benson |day thst actual loans and sealing of corn in in celbe ibs would start within the next few days under the $10,000,000 na Des, 5 to conserve seed supplies in England has an average of 18 deaths daily from motor accidents. @ “HLR.SMITH, PHONE 106

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