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PAGE EIGHT . CLEAN-UP TIM: | IN NATION'S CAPITAL GIT" White House Undergoes Over- hauling While Coolidges Are Out of City Washington way worn out rebuilt, but much t ten with and ran all over a n another one there, t until the first pateh it’s time to start an in 3 of constant ti s proce eri ne old pile reasonably spruce underneath danger of heap, with family at the be watched too care fully f ‘ AE ie by degrees, ches « point where it cons stucco, putty, linseed oil, white and nothing el of lead Curiosity gnaws vital Who cooked meais over Sunday, just before they left for Swampscott? Mrs. Julia Jongbloet, White House »ok, de. parted for the sun al. ‘Ine | Cooltdges didn't until, Monday.| wean That leaves at least nomeals un counted for luncheon and. dinner) ABOVE 1S “OLD G breakfast, dinner IN THE ‘VENNE LS AD day, breakfast and lune LITTLE HOME, PL he Me Rumor bh it that : BY ALLENE SUMNER cooki h NEA Service Writer she could, Th Dayton, Tenn, duly 6.—"We} years without humans haven't no call to compre . hend the incomprehens.ble, or scru- But the unromantic truth in this tinize the rutable.” ance is that the executive man-) Th mountain eabin of “Old sion’s entire kite rsonnel didn't’ George” Morgan, mountain preache go to Swampscott when Mrs. Jong- hugs the b of Waldon bloet did. pugh st behind to Ridge n rve. Those final meals Dayto! the 5 1a trifle sketehy it's the mountaineers call the evolution at the Coolidgesa had battle, rages, of them—but The “Worst Reader” thi e's high au-) Generation neration dignity: for t that they Morgans have atop Waldon's were prepared by professional hands and valley folks eae far below. Another burning question—Why! They George have the Coolidges four cooks in about Worst re in the three months? Careful investigation means that he rex proves that there's no myste Mountatin two of them. Mrs. Jongbloct’s nd seems to be i upon their bare tables, look So much for her. Mrs. » the incumbent when) gan with awe, the Coolidges moved in and a sw Nd George Morgan's read this vivor in her position from away back win fellow,” they tell you, and in President clt's day, quit be- & bit of respect and for one who wing old, had saved Would so defy his God, ru wanted to rest. heir voice, ms We found “Qld George” Morgan ih ee d between! hoeing his dahlia plants and Mrs. “Mulvey Mrs. Jongbloet, ing at the blue-misty valley mo How about them? Why was their than 2,000 feet below him tenure so. brief ccording to in-| The monk war down there siders, those two cooks were too! Geo Morg genial old face s0- “faney” for President Coolidge’s be : taste. He likes simple food. He's So much wrangling and jang- a man of the world, can stand for ling,” he said, “all because folks some frills on special occasions, but) Want to comprehend the incompre- eating alone with family, plain stuff is what he craves, ‘The two unaccounted-for cooks, it seems, | Monies —the streets resound with the considered it beneath ‘their art to accents of the Wollsh tongue: fuss over such plebeian dishes as he Hy hin a fey SAAN s anol Amawle insisted on. Whether they were is to be found and inst fired or if they quit in disgust is the SWits with their quaint pe ‘ Coolidges' own tecret, They wont tmes walk the streets, peering into shop windows, The sanctification of even tell who the superseded “me chanics” were, not wishing, it's new French plained, to make it harder fo 8 Peter's ilica-brings to to get fres But. there Rome scores of thous of French question that’ they retired, by re- and en and for a week noth- quest or otherwise, for the White ing but French is heard. Almost House service's own good. jovernicht the French h s ——— : ed and have been succeedd b: FINLAND PREPAR! man and Dutch, , LUMBER IN U S|. Swarthy Portuguese have their Washington, July 6.—() 1 ded by blond now the most heavily forested European countries, has aroused much attention from’ American lum- | ber manufacturers by creating an organization in its lumber trade for | English with the savor of Dublin. marketing in the United States. The | = ; National Lumber Manufacturers’ As- sociation, one of the American groups PACIFL OF PACIFIC RETIRES most concerned, has received advices! | Honolulu, July 6. (P)- Alexander that the Finnish saw mill owners | Hume Ford, widely known in all the have put in charge of their enter-| Countries bordering on the Pacific. prise John Saari, formerly a lumber manufacturer in’ Portland, Ore. and are attempting to establish a’ per-| ad manent foothold in this country. o Union. angeiather, of American lumber trades have been | "&Merous n-Pacific — éonferences somewhat jolted. by the infereatign {held in Honolulu in recent years, an- ip view of the fact that In the past | nounsed jis early retirement trom American lumber exports have gone | the Pan-Pacific Club and asked the to nearly all continents of the world. | oo ty Abe thee what hey Gate The only opportunity the Finnish pro. | 0%, 11° “id not state what his plans ducers have to market in the United | “°"° States, it was said, comes from the very coniplete utilization which they | can make of their timber, and the willingness of their own con-| sumers to use short lengths and bits of wood. The American experts point | out that this national custom results in complete use of every tree cut, and lower operating charges agains resulting lumber that may allow it to compete in the United States against home produced timber. [surprised his friends recently with ‘the announcement tha 5 to “take ” Ford, HOLY YEAR THRONGS CHANGE | ROME’S COMPLEXION DAILY, Rome, July 6—()—Rome cannot | compare with New York, jondon or} Paris as a cosmopolis but the 1925 Holy Year which is now bringing the city an average of 10,000 pilgrim ar-| rivals daily has given’ the city a type! of cosmopolitanism of which none of | the three great world capitals can boast. Whereas the sidewalks of Times Square, Piccadilly Circus or the Place de \'Opera are thronged nearly every day of the year with polyglot! crowds representing scores of differ- ent nations and as many tongues, the complexion of the main| thoroughfares of Rome in poini of! foreign pedestrians changes fromj \. week to week, almost from day to ne day—when a large group pil-| The sips “Peary” an mage from Warsaw has arrived to of Donald B, MacMillan for Arc eipate in the Holy Year cere-, iS RES Ut is ii “Bowdoin,” anch: © explor. HEARS HILLS WHISPER OF GOD SSWERS FEET ABOVE e and serutinize the inserut- The Mountains Know “Look at itains,” and his | lean brown fingers pointed to a dis tant pa y with chestnut! bloom and they Iks know, they minister! ological eninary down in Athe But he cxme back to the moun fathers without his pskin, But degree or none, he went upon his work, tending his h deat. tle and fruit trees week ing his horse, Bible in sa Ss and preaching the word of God to h mountaineers on the “Folks can't begin to doubt one word in the Bible.” says the moun- tain preacher, “without beginning to doubt all of them, And then where'll they be?” ‘avers School Law Morgan, h. will children, More: a keep the cast a bright blue eye over bluer. ht I sit in di watch the stars,” skies ne front of the make me hunger to know Why we came and HIGH OFFICIALS OF N. D. AGREE WITH JARDINE Endorsement of Secre culture Jardine’s analysis of agricul- tural problems of th Northwest, outlined in his address at Mandan Independence D: was voiced by state leaders today. GOVERNOR SORLIE: Iam in ab- solute accord with the views expre: ed by Secretary Jardine. More bu: ness in agriculture, more effici: and better marketing is the only remedy for overproduction and con sequent. low returns in, agriculture. CONGRESSMAN J. H. SINCLAIR, Kenmare: I agree with the S tary of Agriculture that leg annot correct the ills of agriculture, except in a supplementary way. We need certain. farm legislation direction of more equi tes, All in ally however, in do little to testore prosperity in agriculture (CONGRESSMAN THOMAS HALL, Bismarck Seeretary i i right. Legislation alone can be of no service in agricultural readjust- ment. y of Agri- _ DEVINE, xtate immi- WHO FINDS TRI TO HIS QUE: THE TOW | enough, where i that, too.” mimissioner: There is no r agricultural depression. “fashioned thifft, coupled with MacMillan’s. Armada ion. after-deck of the “Peary.” ed at. Wiscasset, Me., just hefore their departure under command Tae airplanes to ‘be used over the ice fields are shown on 'THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE AIDFOR STATE | MILL PROMISED ~ BY PARMHEAD Jardine Approves Governor’s Program for Development of Milling Industry The U. S. Department of Agricul- ture will cooperate with the State of North Dakota in the operation of the state-owned mill and elevator at | Grand Forks, and every resource of | the federal department will be pla ed at the disposal of the state in development of the project, Gover- nor A. G, Sorlie announced today fol- lowing a lengthy conference Sunday with Secretary of Agriculture Jar- dine. Approves Program Governor Sorlie stated Secretary Jardine enthusiastically approved of. the state’s program aimed at devel- opment of a milling industry in North Dakota capable of handling the state's enormous grain produc- tion. ‘Secretary Jardine and myself have similar ideas as to the impor- tance of cooperative marketing as the solution of agriculture’s most pressing. problems,” Sorlie declared. “Jardine expressed his approval of the state’s progress in aidine North Dakota farmers in organizing for marketing their wheat' and flax.” The executive referred to the state-owned mill and elevator as a “laboratory” to aid farmers in the grain marketing business, and indi cated the Sorlie administration will not go into the milling industry on a larger scale than developing the | Grand Forks project. “It is the aim of the state to lay the basis for a vast milling indus- try within our borders far the home manufacture of North Dakota wheat,” | he stated. “When North Dakota wheat is milled in North Dakota, it will be possible to pay the farmer more for his crop and put North Dakota flour on the market at an absolute reduction below the present price, laboratory to discover the method for marketing'the state wheat eran.” he declared. Sorlie said Jardine heartily en- dorsed his views and announced that the conference was highly successful. SCIENTISTS IN HOUSE CAR TH AND COMFORT BELOW IS HIS McPherson, Kans., July 6.—(®)-— A study of bird life from South Da- kota to Mexico City, and back along the western coast of Mexico and the United States to Canada, will be made this summer by Prof. H. H. Nininger, head of the biology de- partment of McPherson College here. Prof. Nininger will make the trip under the auspices of the National Ornithology Society and it is ex- pected to result in the most impor- tant discoveries in the interests of ornithology. | The party will start from western South Dakota and travel in a house- downeingthoed car, built especially for the purpose, us to believe. Care will be taken to keep well ahead “There were 10 of us kids running| of cold weather, so that the birds over these mounta and our, can be studied in advance of the mi- mrmmy and pappy didn’t have much,| gratory period for the American but they taught us that cool moun-| species. Crossing the Rio Grande, the tain air and spring water and the] Party will continue south, gathering green grass and the blue sky were|data on the species both rare and and not to be asking for|¢ommon to Mexico. While there, the other things. migratory “I learned to keep satisfied in life.| which will have sought winter quar- I got another suit of clothes and]ters, will be closely observed, enough money for buryin’ and I got] From the City of Mexico, Prof. my Bible and my wife and I aim I'm] Nininger will move northward, trav- the happiest man alive. I can live|eling along the western coast of on $100 a yea Mexico and the United States until Black ‘smol : wraith| the Canadian border is reached. from the lowlands, and the toot of aj Colleges and universities along the factory whistle | echoed faintly{ Toute in both countries have asked through the ridge. Prof. Nininger for his disclosures. “They slave so down there things they don’t need,” said mountain preacher. “I don’t want to take nothin’ away STION: going and if our folks over there. : t's sin, and I make -my- self stop bothering God and just sit Il and watch ‘em up there all crisp and cold like He kn P “rm and he is God. prehend the ingompr Easy to Bel “But God comes clo on the mountains are to those easier for for a the| SERMONS BY WIRELESS EXASPERATE CLERGYMEN Addlestone, Surrey, Eng., July 6- he went} from life with me but happiness and] @)—What he describes as “the lazy my belief in my Book. I want those| habit of wireless” has been strongly little children down there to have| denounced bv the Rev, A. Cuming, vicar of Addlestone, in his parish magazine. packed church to which we have foresight will restore farming to a] been accustomed during Lent,” as- par with other industries. serts the vicar, “and the reason for JOSEPH A. KITCHEN, commis-| this is the wireless. sioner of agriculture: — Cooperation nybody who thinks he can wor- is coming. I hold with Secretary| ship God by lolling back in an easv Jardine that the cooperative move-|arm chair and listening by radio to ment will, when it develops, restore| the beautiful singing of the cho‘ farming to its place in the ptesent]/at St. Soand-So’s, or the ovratorical industrial order. effects of the ‘Bishop of Kamchatka,’ is simply living in a fool's Paradige. rue worship demands sacrifice. AMERICAN COLLEGE PROFESSOR | People who tte too lazy to go up. HONORED BY RUMANIAN KING | stairs and put their things on and London, July 6.—()—The King of] come to the House of God on God's Rumania has conferred the Order of| Day, are grossly: neglecting their the “Crown of Rumania,” in the de-| duty. : gree of commander, upon Professor] “We must face the fact that in noch E. Peterson, of Luther College, | wireless has been found another pow- Towa, who is on leave of absence from | erful recruit added to the phalanx of his college as Research Fellow of| counter attractions which, their the University of Michigan in class-| various ways, continue to keep the ies. For two years Protessor Peter-| people out of the churches.” son has been on the staff of the| The British Broadcasting Company, University of Michigan expedition to| Which controls most of the wireless the Near: East® entertainment in the London area, The decoration was conferred by| has recently declined to broadcast reason of service rendered in connec-| Sunday sermons, excepting on rare tion with the Congress of Byzantine | ccasions, because of the objections Studies, held in Bucharest in April,| °f ministers that their congregations 1924, at which Professor Peterson| Would be materially reduced if the represented several American univer-| Practice was followed generally. sities. During the Roman period Spain EHCINRERE REGORD and Portugal were one country, London.—An engineer on the North- | #Row?_88_Hispanit. eastern Railway figures he has driven is engine 1,460,000 miles in 40 Thing - MISS x ars. He never has had an acci- A Good DON'T i -dent. DR. R. 8. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Bh. Bismarck, N. D. ——————— ee ‘ OLDSMOBILE . SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO, 107 6th St. Phone 428 . “The Grand Forks mill will be a! best TO STUDY MIGRATORY BIRDS; birds of the northland,! “There is no longer the. | Mrs, Ida May Symington, snapped in the New York courtroom while testimony of a most sensational na- ture was being presented in connec- tion with the divorce action of her millionaire husband, Thomas H. Symington, who made his fortune through inventions of railroad appli- ances. Already one witness, Talbot Chambers, has testified to improper relationship and faces a statutory charge. The great library at Alexandria was destroyed by Omar in the sev- enth century, who sald that the Kor- an was the only book people should read. i | { |July 6to July 11} | a {| Pa \Minot Fair $6.75 | MONDAY, JULY 6, 1925 n PRINTERS VOTE INCREASED TAX |home. The union members gave the * FOR MAINTENANCE OF HOME | proposal a majority of almost 15,000. Indianapolis, July 6—(#)—The The additional money will be used yearly income of the Union Printers | to complete and equip an addition to Home in Colorado Springs, will be] the home and for maintenance. Help- increased about $85,000 as the result | less patients, who have not previously of a favorable vote by members of| been eligible for admission, will be the International Typographical | cared for under the enlargement plan; Union on the question of a ten per cent increase in the monthly per capita tax for maintenance of the Even Iceland is experiencing a heat wave this summer. TAKING A VACATION EVERY DAY ‘ ‘ALL SUMMER 4 Summer is just one long vacation to the family with a car. The long evenings, the week-ends, the holidays, all afford an oppor- tunity to the motorist to go somewhere and rest, refresh, and recreate body and mind. 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