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7 PAGE TWELVE MANY WATCH COOLIDGE GO TO HIS WORK Crowds Gather at Dupont Circle Each Morning to See His Departure S Washington, May 20.) Dupont Mirele, since President Coolidge went to live there, means more these days than just one of the national | _caun tas many parks. : Some activities of official life are now a good deal more “public” than Aut the comparatively sequestered white House on Penns! unia avenue, which is being repaired. The business of sending a Presi- dent off to work, for instance, has become a matter of interest to hun dreds who are detained at the Circle every morning at lock, while trattic streaming the Circle from ten direc Ited to per: mit the + exe: emerge and avenue undeterred on its way to the ite House offire he temporary White House sts out prominently on this busy) thoroughfare. If it is a fine morn- ing as he steps out of the grilled doorway, Mr. Coolidge may pause to | catch the scent of early magnolias. | Otherwise he is likely to step quick- | Homeless youngsters ly into his automobile, stooping| valley, are taking life jastiehtly so the broad black fedora which he usually wears to work | misses the low door. | But it is especially in the after-| noon that Dupont Circle park be- comes popular, Dozens of mothers | and nursemaids bring out the young- sters for un airing, ruminating per: fhaps ithat a president's park is choice place for the children Kthe same time keeping in mind all ‘the diplomats and other representa- | “tives of state that might be glimpsed there is Mrs. Cool the temporary W y, and the pictured at a camp near Natch little refuge April Loss Placed at Nine Thousand, Compared With, Over $16,090 in March—| Goclndpes’ | Minus Interest, Deprecia-| handsome white collies ure taken| tion «Charges, Institution | into the circle for exercise, and the | Gyoungsters deem it a great occasion! Would Show Nearly $17,- 000 Profit. s | if the cautious negro attendant per- i “mits them to pat the dogs’ fleccy | P white heads. | ‘Minnesota Doctor - Yr Routs Necktie Pest) iio veccnt past, according to. the |monthly report filed with the state A Wheaton, Minn., doctor recently | industrial commission by K. C. Nel-| came in contact with the high-pres- | son, auditor. sure, mail order necktie specialists | Nelson pli { who are flooding the mails with un- | $9,315.29 compared with more than *ordered merchandise, and when the | $16,000 in M and more than $32,- episode was concluded, the doctor !000 in February. If no deduction is de for interest and depreciation had effecti s variety of | m pest, and had uncovered a new way |charges, the plant made a profit for month of $16,977.82. of meeting this mail abuse. Nelson’s report shows that there b the April loss at The story of this episode ‘orth reprinting, is thus desc Wheaton (Minn.) Gazette: * “Some months ago,” says the ( * zette, “Wheaton was flooded with neckties of an inferior grade sup posed to have come from a certain blind man for which the sum of one "dollar for three ties was asked. It is said that a certain doctor got hi Yname off the “sucker list” by t wing the salesman at his own game. He received the neckties and while she figured they were not worth a dollar he thought they might be worth keeping t down and in- | in tead of following instructions, sent yw the concern a prescription with a! letter telling him that it was recom- mended for ‘gall.’ He also said the evalue of the prescription was two dollars and that he would give the sender of the neckties credit for one sdoflar and all that it would be neces- sary to remit to him would be the} badditional dollar. | f Two Dollars Per Call % “In a few days the doctor re- Heeived an acknowledgment of the pprescription in a letter stating that | it was being returned and a request | Bto return the neckties. The doctor esent a letter back and told the neck- tie man that it was some distance | Hbetween the postoffice and his of-|4 _Wfice-and that he charged two dol- |? Jara for cach call out of his of! So'that if the pecktie man would jexend “him two dollars he would make Pthe call ut the postoffice and de PPosit the neckties. “This was too much for the tle man and he wrote a very snappy | >! alling the doétor thut he had By m his name o: le list an 1 4 3 (926 future he would receive no mer-|por in,‘ December BL, 1326 Pehandise from him which it is said | /9% i January, 1927 i@id-not grieve the doctor greatly. | Loe in February, 1927 “This method of dealing with the | Los# in March, 1927 of houses who will take this | Loss in April,’ 1927 : f merchandising is hij icit for four months, 1927 ... ded by the doetor as pro-|Total deficit to April 30, 1927 of results and also as a!) ANALYSIS topping further annoy- Three Months—January Loss from January 1 to March 31, Interest on construction bonds . Alfalfa- Association [Interest on operating bonds ; .. |"Depreciation Mas Record Business sles of North Dakota grown | Sed sweet clover seed from} stop through the nam association will exceed $150, y @ record volume. of, bus: ganuary the establishment of this co- | February -organization 13 years ago, | March tog to the manager, Edgar I. | April ,the North Dakota agricul igures mill auditor vernor as mill manager. mployed by the industrial on, his report Nel: here still is | $10,576.99 in the closing out entries as of December 31, of which $7,059.42 affects the mill department counts and $3,517.57. affects elevator department. Commenting on the figures shown the report Nelson said: “You 1 note that the loss for the mill department for the month is $ and the loss in the el ment is $1,260.01. The profits shown in the operations of the local eleva- tor, $484.11, make a consolidated for the month of $9,315. is a considerably better show. the year but the profit is to increased premium values on wheat. There has been an increase approximately three cents per bushel a total approximately $13,000 increase in premium values over previous months.” il, however, the interest and de- eciation continue to slowly against the mill and -time deficit on April at $1,328,068.97, Status statement shows the the enterprise as industrial commis- The following the Bu. Ground «150,678. 115,685. 133,479 + 157,367 Los incurrgd in the operation of | jthe state mill and elevator was less | ing than“*has been made so far this | T ly due | he better showing during | OF DEFICIT 1927 Operating credit to apply on fixed overhead charges Miss. es Whose chief que stion ! STATE MILL AND ELEVATOR LOSS LESS IN APRIL, AUDITOR’S REPORT SHOWS ! | State Mill Appeals From Court Ruling | in $20,000 Case) Appeal to the supreme court has | been taken by the state mill and! elevator association. in a” case in| which Knute Bakken is suing for} $20,000 personal injury damages. | | The case was. appealed from the Burleigh county district court which | overruled the state's demurrer to the | complaint of the plaintiff. | Bakken claims to have been in- jured while aiding in an audit.at the Drake mill several years ago. He was assigned to the task of moving flour sacks from a storage room when a pile of sacks toppled upon him and pinned him to the floor. He was so badly injured that he is un- able to work, he contends. The mill and elevator association, represented by the attorney general’s office, contended in its demurrer that Bakken had. no: just) cause’ of action against it. .The appeal is from the order of the!'lower court overruling the demurr Iodine Essential to Perfeet Health, —— | ; If a man or animal cannot get) |enough air, water or food, he will die, This fact is obvious to us because uire air, water and food in} amounts and.are conscious of | how and when we take them Into our} bodies. There are other natural elements | just as necessary'to life, but of | which we are not conscious because | they are taken into our bodies in’ minute quantities omin disguised | forms. Wis S| One of these elements’ ‘is. iodine. | fhe amount we require is very small, vet it is absolutely essential to life. | | No human being can be born alive or live without iodine, and none can maintain normal health without a sufficient quantity of this valuable element. Reet Iodine exists in the body chiefly in etion of ‘the thyroid gland, in the throat. This iodine- secretion is vitally essen- 1 to the growth of brain and body. ¢ thyroid gland cannot manufac- | tare iodine, but must secure it from | food and’ water taken into the stomach. | necessary amount of this | s not present, the thyroid | ymes enlarged and we have $1,253;457.19 | $17,799.22 | 32,095.48 | 16,301.79 1315.29 15,511.78 $1,928,968.97 | ’ Ist to March 3ist, 1927 aes 6,511.78 | | | | 36,860.66 | $111,372.44 ° $111,872.44 | MILL PRODUCTION RECORD, 1927 | Bbls. Made Loss $17,799.22 32,095.48 16,301.79 9,815.20 Per Bbl. Loss | 8 1.262 551 33,439, 25,418 29,388 34,613 27 \ ‘college. Sales by this organ- ; ¥, 557,209 a @ Year ago. aggregated $53,000, | z ce | agricultural college, -W. F. Moore of mi |Carringtons Lawrence Roden of Ma- pleton and Jalmer Herre of Kelso nandien Grim eed | lex: For Town Libraries mark, Mr.|. Club women throughout North Da- n cantict kota are pushing ahead in the work About ops-halt of the alfalfa seed |of organizing local libraries, accord- a th of the rast clover ing to information received here by ¢ las bow jorth Dakota| Mies Lillian Cook, state librarian. : ’ ‘The. Goodrich Womén’s club plans Mis | to open a city library there, soon. bought ey. have a bui ing ready for oc- ¢eupancy and plan to aid in its opera- At Ray sthe ‘Women’ club ‘yp con- @ new commun- i liears being organized there and {the be will bring the ik women are engaged in the launching.a library to serve fibraries ‘will’ stock, t and childre: Club Women Arrange} Av. § 6264 oboe | i (inte RAR out on the line in plain sight.’ | | Country Gentleman. 75,511.78 HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE hundreds of them, in the Red Cross refugee camps of the flood-stricken Mississippi hardships and uncertainties just as happily and as philoscphically as this “gang” Secretaries Hoover and Davis are talking things over with the is, “When do we eat?” the disease known as goiter. Lesser degrees of iodine produce general symptoms of lowered vitality. Chil- dren who suffer from iodine insuf- ficiency generally are mentally and physically backward. * é A form of restoring iodine to the diet is now being tried and is in a fair way of being generally adopted as the right and logical-method. That method is to restore to table salt the natural iodine that ts associated with salt in the sea. lodized salt had its first real test in Switzerland, where 87 per cent of the schoolchildren were fouhd to be suffering from goiter. After four years use of iodized salt the percent- age of goiter was reduced to 13 per cent, a remarkable showing indeed. The advantage of properly made iodized salt is that, while it contains enough iodtne to prevent goiter, it does not contain a sufficient quan- tity to disturb the most delicate sys- teri, Because of this it may be free- ly used in place of ordinary salt, both jon the table and in cooking. WORSE THAN THAT “How did your intelligence test come out? TI suppose they found your mental age about twelve.” “fwelve! They said I hadn’t even been born.”—Judge. \ WEARY BYLE Collector: Your account has been running for a long time, Mr. Jones. Mr. Jones: Exactly, sir. It must be very tired. Let’s just let it lie for awhile.—Smith’s Weekly. A church in London has a library} of 1,000 volumes without an attend- ant. Borrowers simply walk in and help themselves, Large’ mirrors are being used at the elbows of L-shaped streets in many German cities to lessen the chances of collision. Women’s Hygienic Worries Ended by new way— Discards like tissue By ELLEN J, BUCKLAND Registered Nurse HANKS to modern scientific findings, women are now almost | entirely relieved of old hygienic worries by a new way called Kotex. | VY You’ discard Kotex casily as| tissue. Which ends laundry and | disposal problems completely. You wear sheer frocks and gowns, dance, motor, go about for hours without, a moment's fedr —for this way is 5 times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton “pads, i Also, it deodorizes — ending all fear of offense. You can obtain it at any without embarrassment, sim: of 12 costs saying “KOTEX.” Box only a few cents. Obtain today, Once you it, you'll never again risk old mag Be sure you get the genuime. Only store, | ly by | 51 , Kotex itself is “like” Kotex. KOTEX | No Jaundry—discard like tissue | act as hosts to the yathering. PHILADELPHIA WILL BE SCENE “OR AUTO MERT National ’ Motoring. Body ‘to Elect Officers, Formulate ‘ Program of Work Washington, D, C., May 20-—()— The 870 motor clubs affiliated with the American Automobile Association will hold their annual convention in Philadelphia June 16 and 17, accord- ing to an announcement from A.A. A. National headquarters here to Due to the increase in membership and the number of new clubs orga ized! as units of the national motor- fing body during the last twelve months, A. A. A. officials’ here pre- dieted that the Philadelphia conven- tion will break ‘all records for al tendance.,: Every section of the cotij try will be represented by focal deli gates to this, the greatest annual get- together of American motordom, and it is, anticipated that when the rol is called, as’ many as 400 delegates will be on hand. While the sessions of the conven- tion will be held in the Ritz-Carlton hotel, four A, A. A. clubs operating in the “City of Brotherly Love” will These units are: The Automobile Club of Philadelphia, the Knights of Colum- bus Automobile Club, Pelham Auto- mobile Club and the Philadelphia Auto Trade Association. Philadelphia secured the A. A. annual convention in the face of hot bidding from a score of cities last January, when the Board of Directors of the. Association met at the Roose- velt, hotel in New York to select the 1927 convention city. ‘The invitation in behalf of, Philad baad was ex- tended by Robert P. Hooper, Pre dent of the Pennsylvania Motor. Fed- eration, which is one of the most werful state units in the A. A. A. it. Hooper is ‘also u member of the A. A. A. executive committee and one of its \former national presidents. To Discuss Problems The major part of the sessions df. the two-day convention will devoted as usual to the, discussion, of motgring and car-owner problems ind to the development of a prograi behind which A, A. A, clubs in every state of the Union from M California will mobilize their forces im‘the months. immediately ahead. At the moment, however, accord: ing-to well founded rumors, the big intere: id the filling of offices in the world’s largest motor federation, which, un- der, its democratic constitution, be- conte vacant each year, Among the of- ‘tices to be filled are the followin, that of national president; six vice presidents; a seeretary; an executive committee and twent; bers of the board of directors. The latter consists of efghty-five mem- e of them represent: | utomobile clubs and ten the; ision of the A. A. ‘A., which | IF “ALWAYS TIRED,” TRY THIS A healthy person never feels con- stantly tired. Being “too tired” con- tinually is a sign of something g.: Watch your kindeys. elimination is faulty, take Foley diuretic, a perfect regulator of ir kidney action. Miss G jens, of Hayneville, Ala, says: “Foléy Pills, diuretic, have’ been a wonderful help to me, relieving me entirely of weakness, that always “too tired” feeling, headaches and ” Men and women every- recommend Foley Ask for them.—Adv. meets in Philadelpl concurrently with the annual convention... Thos. mes of Detroit, Mich., has held the office of president for three successive years al to his leadership, prominent: ficials ascribe a. consideral of the credit not enly increase in the membership, but also its ‘solidarity, the nation-wide char- acter of its standaedized service, its activities in the - ti public relations and the wnity of pur- pose which inspired .ita campaigns; ‘in beHalf of motoring progress. Safety Tatke Planned While the agenda of the convention are still incomplete, many.of the out- standing problems confronting motor- dom. are scheduled for thorough airing. Foremost among these is that pertaining to street and highway safety, motor clubs ia their character of semi-public utiliti¢s heaving al- ready assumed ‘he Jeadetspip in this important field. & ¢ The association is already ¢ommit- it matters of ted to a vigorous campaign for the|: elimination at the earliest possible moment of the remaining portion vf the war ‘excise tax on motor vehieles and steps willbe téken to assure consideration for the claims of the car owners in: this respect when the ways and means committee of the House of Representatives meets late in. the summer to take up the next national revenue bill. 4 Siftce the A. %A. A. bas, in. its na- tional capacity, steadfastly refused to countenance compulsory: automobile insutance, it is expected that a fur- ther. statement of policy in this mat- ter will be forthcoming, especially. in view of the decisive rebuff that the various proposals for compulsory in- surance met with in the 1927 sessions of mote than a score of state legis- latures. ba 909 . Shoes that retail dt $12.16 a pair in Australia, leading “cattle ‘country, may ‘be bought foe-95.84 in London the great | 1; FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1927 AG DECISION —_ Mr. sera bron pacing the floor i is Tums. "uHenrietts,”, he. finaliy” squeaked, “lm Ca to faeabt rd cz, these me every .' es inquired Mrs. Meeker gold- *wyes, and I'm going to buy a little express be bate tomorrow.”—Life, < THROWN FOR A LOSS “Did you near about the Seotch- man who just went insane?” “No, what was the matter?” “He, bought score card at’ the, ame, and neither team scored.”— assing” Shi 0a ike gg nog majamas, ase.” — “You mean pajamas, don’t you?” “No; they're to give my mother for her: birthday.”—Yorkshire Post.. NOT 80 SHARP Comis Artist: (to editor): You sit_down on all my jokes. Editor: I, wouldn’t if they had any point to them,—Judge. s For 13 years a black cat.has at- tended every service in a church in’ Bristol, Gen Brrig It lives in° the pullding. gnd is fed by the parish- jo ‘ + “Quaker Flavor” QUICK AUAKER Quicker chan toast! Quicker than coffee! Now or $7.80°in the United States. Springfield 4s the name of 45 com: munities in the United States, five in Canada afd-one each in South Africa and New Ze Scientists believe roaches spread cancer. Besafe. Kili them and other’ dangerous Excursion Ready.in 2%'to 5 minutes! The original and Genuine. : Red Crown Ethyl tor Perfect Motor Performance! ise * Red Crown Ethyl"knocks |} out that knock”— uses carbon to develop power —makes the engine quick to obey—lively and alert! Carbon troubles gone. ‘Unfailing power: Unfal- tering speed.Smooth miles of delightful motoring.