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PAGE TWO PILGRIN'S TRIP | OBSERVED BY A BIG RECEPTION Plymouth, England, Will Cele- brate Sailing of Fathers to America on Sept.3-11 MANY GUESTS THERE Plymouth, Eng., Aug. 18.—A_ civic, reception and concert in guildhall here will be gin the eight days’ round of festivities with which ymouth will celebrate the Tercentenary of the sailing of the Pilgrim Fathers from this port. The reception will be held the evening of September 3. Mayor Lovell R. Dunstan will pre- side. On Saturda September’ 4, there will be a lit Q istorical con- ference under the ices of the Mayflower Council. During the at- be a histerical ternoon there will procession while 359 guests of the Lord Mayor will be taken on a steamer trip through the harbor. There will be js united re cele bration at the guildhall in the even- ing. Where Plane Landed. One of the most impressive fea- tures of the week's program will be a service to, be held Sunday, Sep tember 5, at the “Mayflower Stone” on the Barbican—the spot whence Fathers embarked and the Pilgrim where the crew of the Any plane NC-4 alighted aft repayment of the f voyage of 1620. On Monday the British and Foreign Sailors’ Society will open the Sail- ors’ Hotel, the English Speaking Union will give « luncheon to the Mayor, corporation officials and about 600 delegates and the founda tio stone of the Mayflower Hall be ing erected by the Salvation Army will be laid. There will be civic cel- ebration on the “Hoe,” the high ridge a mile Jong fronting the most beautiful part of Plymouth Bay> The mayor will give a banquet to 250 guests in the evening. Motor Trip Tuesday. Tuesday’s program includes a mo- tor trip for 200 guests of the Mayor to Princeton, Ashburton, Newton Ab- pot, Totnes and Torquay—neighbor ing places of historic interest and noted for their scenic beauties. At Torquay the Mayor and Corporation of that pbrough will receive the vis- itors anfl entertain them at luncheon in the town hall. A garden party at ‘Torre Abbey will follow. In the ev- ening there will be a public meeting with American speakers. Lady Astor will give a ty Wednesday afternoon park, the home of Lord Morley. Tt is expected 600 will attend. \ Another function has been arranged by the Mayor of Plymouth to be held at the . corporation museum during the eve- ning. A luncheon and garden party will be given Thursday by the Women’s Section of the Free Church Counce A visit to the government naval es- tablishments with tea at Edgecombe Park, the home of the Earl and Countess of Edgecombe, and a theatri- cal gala will complete this day’s pro- gram. A charabanc excursion for, 400 guests to Durrator, the artificial lake which supplies Plymouth with water, and tea at Buckland Abbey where Lady Seaton “will be hostess have been arranged for. Friday. Saturday's schedule for the visit- ors include a regatta and swimming exhibition off the Hoes Bach day of the celebration there will be a performance of the Tercen- tenary Pageant which has been ar- ranged by the Mayflower Council. Each householder in Plymouth has been requested by the Mayor to dis- play the American flag from his| home during the festival week. | garden par- at Saltram HELPS MAKE STRONG, SI STURDY.MEN andHEALTHY) | Dor with a monthly dues have been 100 per cent. The monthly dues from Aug. 1 are BEAUTIFUL WOMEN “Tron is red blood food and in day experience | have found ‘no better means of building A - ‘upthe red bloaticorpuscles $1. They used to ‘be 50 cents. tional church out of ‘them? pnd helping to give in: | fe examine: dec TiS Olathe fined up in factions. ‘creased power to the No member is exempt if he has i aid. bef Bloodthanorganiciron- | | paid his dues several months in ad-f Finally, the matter was laid before Tike ai orm vance. The committee announced | the “presbytery .at Topeka. That ithe Ball that every member who has paii| body ruled that a Presbyterian ixamier. dues beyond Aug. 1 mist purchase| Church was not a Presbyterian “ ACCEPT TUTES locality, write us Fargo, N. Dak. widely distributed in Anato! Italy ed their events have been confirmed by tlie Allied commission whose reports fa- vored us. “The very powers that disapproved of the Greek atrocities are throw- ing must fight. : “A period of training is necessary Enlist! Advise dz serters to return to the shall smash the enemy by the of Our Prophet.” Members of brought face to face with this new REV. AND MRS. H. H. COONTZ Urge Turks to Buy From Ar! or Allies - Articles Own Merchants Don’t Have menians Constantinople, Aug. 18.— Natioal- ists are spreading their propaganda} for a boycott against the Greeks by writing on the five-piastre note-an appeal urging Turks to buy from Ar- menians or merchants of allied no tionalities any article they cannot get irom ‘Turks. ny There is no metal money circutat-| tetian-Congregational,” is no more. ing here now. so that the s renty notes are used gene! ly. A Mustapha Kemal Pasha “To our great regret Mri have associated have the Greek army e treaty terms. fh polic: y. The Greeks ‘oy the cradle of into churche shops in Smyrna. these pirates against us. Offer your sons! army. paisa hierar woe LOAFING COST ALSO GOES UP Enter the high .cost the I. W. W, announcement by committee that ballet an addition#] 50 cent stamp which will be pasted, in his membership book over viously issued. the 50 cent stamp "4 A PRACTICAL THRESHING OUTFIT $2,475.00 PRICE ~$2,475.00 WOOD BROTHERS SEPARATOR Size 20x86—Complete with blower, feeder and elevator. Price f. Other Sizes—24x46, 28x50, 32x54, 36x58 and 40x62 SANDUSKY MODEL J TRACTOR Will operate a 20 or/24-inch Wood Brothers’ Sep- arator and pull three plows. Price f. 0. b. factory $1250.00. Larger size 15-35, Place your order now to insure delivery. limited. -If we do not have a representative in your o. b. factory $1175. Supply A Dependable Tractor and Separator MORE BROTHERS CORPORATION Factory Distributors Wimbledon, N. Dak. LEAVE DIVIDED, KANSAS, TOWN REC ey BISMARCK ‘ Cayrtd OCG - Under the management of some of the oldest and most aggressive business educators in the country —numbers ‘among their graduates COMMENDED BY THOUSANDS OF SUCCES WEDNESDAY, AUG.: 18,/1920 oe BISMARCK : “oe ‘ No other institutions » better equipped for their purpose—high- grade instructors, Graduates serve satisfactorily from the start the most exacting employers of SPUL* STUDENTS: Tyovoort ro. nace CHURCH UNION GREEK PRESSURE all cur- ircular | organist — of L reads: themselves with the Boulogne Conference’s de- cision to accept the offer of Veni- zelos to force the p is part of the terminatii au pow u trying to de} forefathers. This the greatest Mohammed. They have transformed They have d our brothers.and plunder: ‘Thess of - loafing wert increased struct war and bread but attempt help the FAILS; PASTOR WEDS ORGANIST Rev. Coontz Declared ‘Too Many Churches. Hurt Town and Combined. Two shas ’ been States. BY MABEL ABBOTT, E. A. Stati Correspondent, * Olathe, Kdn., Aug. 18.—The “First Federated Church of, Olathe, Presby- But while it, lasted, the minister of the Presbyterian church and the ( the Congregationat shurch formed a church federat: that they say, will be permanent. They got married. And now thev are going away to seek a less de- nominationally-minded community. in which to set up housekeeping. Churches Everywhere Olathe is a very, very. serious- minded town. There is a church on almost .every corn To the Presbyterian church, a year or so ago, came Rev. H. H. Coontz, 2 young army chaplain, as pastor. Denominations hadn’t cut much ice in army religin’ when there was somethi#€ to be accomplished, and Rev. Coontz had acquired the army viewpoint in that regard. y So last Febru; when the Con- gregational churc! burned down, We] Rev., Coohtz made the © suggestion. “Why not federate with us?” he said to the Cong ionalists. ‘Olathe has too many churchesvanyway. ‘To- gether, we can do more for the com- munity than we can singly.” The idea appealed to many mem- bers of both congregations, and-after 3ome time, was adopted. Meanwhile, in April, Rev. Coontz married Miss Frances Evans, pretty organist of the Congregational church. Then It’Started For eight weeks, the two churches held joint services in the. Presbyteri- But some of the gool were not satisfied. They said Rev. Coontz was a funny kind of a Presbyterian. What was hey t g to do? Make a Congrega- and en- our We aic the; 2" building. th: | Presbyterians church unless its board. was exclus- ively Presbyterian and elected by an usively Presbyterian \ congrega- pre"! tion. So the “First Federated Church of Olathe” went the way of many other ‘attempts at church union. a «Too Hurt: City” 4g “Olathe is ridiculously overchurch- ed,” said Rey. Coontz. “It has 14 churches to a population of about 8000 people. So many churches are a nuisance. They hurt the city.” ACADEMICIAN TO JAIL FOR TAXES London, Aug. 18.—Sir W. Rich- mond, Royal Academician, will go to jail rather than pay the increased taxes now being charged by the Hammersmith Borough Council. He writes to the local press, “Ihave re- fused to comply with this: Bolshevist demand of 149 annually on my house and grounds just under two acres. I would rather, at the age of 710 years, go to prison than be a party to such injustice and robbery.” Kon ee cabs thousands of the most successful business men .and women in the Unifed States and Canada. oo In Session Throughout the Year . TOO MANY.HOLIDAYS SERIOUS. EUROPEAN PROBLEM, MOTT FINDS | working in toreign countries. a lieve the Russian question, owing to| output of the mint. Poland Has 90 Holidays a Year, Besides Sunday, and Rumania Has Twice This Number Budapest, Aug. 18 seneral secretary of the International Y. M. C. A,, in outlining the organ- tion’s pla ure too many holidays in Europe.”- Poland, according to Mr. Mott, has 90 holidays a year, besides Sundays, Rumania that number. leading ‘to. political upheavals,” de-| “I clared the-American. In giving the first details of. the Y. M. C. A. Christian federation’s proposed nex efforts to help. broke: Dr. Mott said: “It will be possible. on which I am now engaged is to Europe from the decadence into which they were plunged by the war. erwise education will be lost through the poverty of professors, and also through’ lack of students. 4 Preaches Seli Help “The keynote of my talk in Iand, Czecho-Slovakia and Hungary must learn to work their way throngh colleges-as is the case in the United From the Y. M: C. A. point of view we are -establishing model branches as we hope to show the new nations their way back to work and to self-help. “It is not by saying ‘Thou shalt Students’ Practice. Bank: at Bismarck bookkeeping help. LANGUM, Pres., ‘Bismarck, N. D: Visitors Always Welcome and _ stenographic For particulars write G. M. war, and for it is by showing the way. The: Y M. GC. A. will help men to spend tl idleness profitably. \[t will adapt it- | eign model Y. M. C. A’s for. universiti ohn R. Mott,} tor railways, for industrial centers, and also in the country for the peasants. It is easier to get money than to ‘spend wisely so we wilk go slowly on that .score. We are gef ting ready, to center Russia, too. Americans are profoundly. anxious to help there. | Can End Russian Muss have been .in Europe s for helping to recon. waged lands says “th delphia has probably twice “Phis means idleness among |New die- and World's Student down Europe jsn’t by givi work that reconstru One of the tasks devise the wisest way to: thools and universities of Oth- Po- self-help. The students unite thachines, 215 Broadway. have been T be- i the desire of the people there to end} not? that the world. can be bettered: } their troubles, will be settled if for- countries can months on the same policy.” for six sett, these nations an ave ee MINT- TURNS OUT ': MANY COINS IN COURSE OF YEAR! Philadelphia, Aug. 18—The Phila- mint turned out coins in the last fiscal year. Raymond T. Baker, director of the United States Mint, gave out the fig- ures after inspecting the institution. 501,000,000 electric GOODRICH TIRES — 207 Discount for cash on Goodrich Tires. ahd Tubes. Buy your tires now and save money. Fabric tires guaranteed for 6,000 miles and Cord tires, 8,000 miles. Northwestern Automotive Co. prisoners, otherwiSe than during the! furhaces and carrying devices have 30 years been installed within the last year adopted which greatly increase the The increase last year was about 26 per cent over 1919. In 1916 a lit- [tle over a million coins were pro- duced. ie Mr. Baker recently returned from an Francisco mint where he is pre- | paring to install improved machin- jery similar to that in the Philadel- phia ‘mint. | “With the recent additions,” said | Mr. Baker, “the Philadelphia mint is now not only the largest mint in this country but manufactures a larger number of coins than any other mint in the world.” ; Women gained suffrage in | Zealand in 1893. 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