1—@General view of the (indicated by arrow) speaking high school bullding In Rapid fdent's vacation, NEWS REVIEW President Are Established in the Black Hills. By EDWARD Ww. PICKARD RESIDENT AND MRS. COOL IDGE, two collies, five and all the necessary household at- tendants are now established for the summer in the South Dakota State Game Lodge, in the Black Hills, And the executive offices of the national government are established In new high school bullding at Rapid City, 32 miles away. Even though Mr. idge should not regain the fa farmers—and he Is n i he will certainly hay restful are entirely to his is on the Canaries vacation in shores of by picturesque mountains, secluded that The to make the City frequently to atten pressing business of hi (On his t comparative nssured. Chief Executive pls while ly t rit autom trip way Wes few hours ir western Indi in the dedication of Wicker pu war memorial of Lake address he spoke of the and growth of the country in a mate rial way, but he mildly iided the tion for delinquencies, of all this said, “we are from what we would like to be delinquencies are us to put forth toward their elir stopped a region of north county. prosperi “In spite progress.” still a great distar sufficien our eff government Is sound lent, too many longs of eit Are exes the obligat : to vote, and violence ane are altogether too prevalen 1a 11 iaCRL ber who aire g in rel tion is altogether too large. “While we est point have material here is prosper. ¥ ff Cons iderable class irkers come int participation vealth of the nation.” One of the odd the achleved, of unskill who ha bursts of applause 2 President's 1 Charles Lindbergh wien “The practical. We are U4 h in ideals which we seek mu our ad one of the rope % wmiration of realities. When Western young from America to Ex hails fy rst our your men is to fly countrs him with a popular ac- £0 gponianeoys, so genuine, as the true values of onr nn- acter.” to disclose tional char Dakota as a whole welcomed the President warmly as train m its way prairies, hesitating at farm ters long enough to the Inhab ftants a glimpse of the Chief Execu- tive and his charming wife. The ofli- cial welcome was staged at Pierre, the capital, where the 'resident and Mrs. Coolidge were prevailed upon to change their program slightly, leav- ing the train and taking their place ut the head of a parade which went through cheering crowds in the busi ness Governor Bulow, Sen- ator Norbeck, Representative Chris. topherson, committeemen, legislators, newspaper editors, farmers, and busi- ness men from all the central section were on hand to greet the President and escort him from town to town. NTEW YORK went completely daffy A over Col, Charles Lindbergh when he flew there from Washington. The city gave him a reception never he- fore equalled. As the young master of the air said, wag “the reception of Parls, Brussels, London and Wash. fnzton rolled Into one.” Millions of the inhabitants of the metropolis stood in n line stretching from the Battery to Central park as the pretentious parade passed, madly cheering the hero and struggling for opportunity to see him. From all the buildings along the route paper confetti was hurled until it ap- peared as if the marchers were pass- ing through a heavy snow storm. At the city hall Mayor, Walker greeted * South the the special ade Across broad the give cen section, York as it park, war the parade in New of Wicker which D., In are the son of gon of the city anotl his coat honor: the aviator y to the throng through the mi his mother was calle front and introduced to crowd, and the procession r to Central park. At Light at Madison pause while wreath at the At the Mall the Governor Smith with the state medal of valor. nal squar was a Lindbergh of the colonel base mem wis me who presented Lindbergh spent most of t York and enter extensively, though time to rest. KE: unexpectedly returned Colonel week In New tained arly morning he te Washington and York in a antic plane, it for St hours with few and on Louis, welcome ting three days. mberlain week plane to various entertained Fokker at New ith Bert was del Acosta as hi ayed by adver Hope for the res her conditions, Nungesser Coll sprang up ang reports had came seen in the wilds srthert but unhsaj wy re soon discredited, CC Italian “four tour, returning Portuga stories Pinedo, continent completed his Azores to derson of the arms air 1 ir maneuvers their plane OVIET RUSSIA'S rage wrder of her ambasss following the break with in, was neern to E it was enough cause uropean statesme aggravated before which the Volkof was tried found the Boris Kowode, guilty but him to life imprisonn leath and Poland to when the court assassin sentenced went instead of requested the President of commute the sentence to 1 lawyers into ane of bolshe fifteen years, Kowode's turned the trial 8 terrorist of the actually to ue the enemies of are executing scores of 1 of whom they activities The Raviet trying and it } sgiayer rulers intimi commu accused of of other gov gloatingly announcing world. They also thousands to The Russian territorial army reserves, numbering some 300,000, usually called out for three weeks’ practice, have notified they are to stay in the service four months, and as most of were being concentrated along the Polish {frontier Poland wae frankly alarmed. Members of the League of Nations council, which met in Geneva, considered taking formal collective se. tion denouncing Russian communistic propaganda abroad, but abandoned the plan at the request of Poland. in the pay then tions to the esoecn ided to exile m any them HE league council discussed the prospects of the projected disarm. sment conference and decided the sec- ond reading of the preparatory plan should be held early In November, Only Herr Stresemann, Gorman for eign minister, criticized the lack of Progress, “Il regret the Inability to advance a solution for the problem, and even if the second reading does not result in failure, a solution seetns delayed to the distant future. The convenant of the league =ays all nations must re. duce thelr armaments,” ingisted Herr Stresemann, voleing the German gov. ernment’'s thesis that if the rest of the powers cannot agree to reduce thelr armament to the level imposed on Germany by the Versailles treaty, then Germany should be permitted tu President of Lake Indiana, 3- of the government during the Coolidge New Pres. county, standard as Germany council that frontier had her European neigh notified the ambas the fort been de quired, and demar ind occupational accordingly. I provided Mars} agreed Foch be pern and four a statement correct. yy Ja.e negotiations for a romise between Chiang Shek, Chang Tso-lin and the of Shans! province were inking Nationalist arm) Peking and pe rtant eity of Haichow border The com Kal- governor the continued its proce dit ng. toward captured near the southerners, 3 ; advance “eommitted rob wholesale fash eo hy lel ing has pled + sent nment prever ‘ ntering Man N THE rece in the Irish Free State he government se in the Fianna Fail (De Vale the Sinn Fein, 5: La ners, 11; Independemt. 8, and Inde 2 President { 40 sents, a net loss of 7, y HIeant ouly seven fewer ssolution. It annex iz he than before Valera to take the giance to the king. If t! Bamon De will refuse ther election WS DONESDAY was a busy day for Andrew Mellon, secretary of the FCARUry. He almost 400.000) - other took In tax pay- ments, due on the completion of the ond quarter of the calendar He took in $50,000,000, paid hy the debtor nations of Europe jean war He sold treasury 3% per pald off maturing short term aggregating SATRO000.000 and year about on Amer loans, $240 508.500 of new Then he ecuritios cent bonds various enyes of The reel; the Liberty bonds, ptr went to swell the S600. the fieal year ex- piring June 30, next, the retire. ment of Liberty bonds and refinancing involved in the transactions means the reduction in the annual interest on the debt many of dollars, Great Britain turned in $687.575.000, which was its ninth semi-annual pay- interest. France paid $10, account,” Italy paid $5. and smaller payments were made by the other debtor nations, i and millions O00 O00, ered in great numbers at At- lantic City for their annual meeting, and 1000000 wearers of the fez took part in a mammoth night parade along the five-mile Boardwalk that was said to be the finest procession ever seen in the resort city. Clarence M. Dun bar of Palestine temple, Providence, R. 1, was clevated to the office of Im perial potentate to succeed David M. ‘rossland, HIRTY-EIGHT of the 2038 cadets graduated from the West Point Military academy last week have re. quested service with the alr corps, the War department has annouwsed. Un. der a department interpretation of the air corps act, commissions cannot be granted in time of peace to any per. fon not a qualified flyer and the 88 cadets, therefore, will undergo traine ing before receiving the second lieu tenant commissions bestowed upov Grain ‘Combines Reducing Costs New Machine Materially Lowers Expense of Cut- ting and Threshing. (Prepared by the United EBtates Depart. ment of Agriculture.) the this use of that terially by the harvester-thresher, Is rapidly mountains, completed by the the study States co-operation with homa, Nebraska cultural colleges this machine are In cutting and threshing tion in labor shortening the Ing periods. East of the of combine Is in siderably merly seen Northwest machines having auxiliary drawn by tractors, Reduces Amount of Labor, Eight-foot acres of grain on 16-foot machines averaged O82 last season, Except where the g very the yield tocky Just Texus, Montana the and The grain, requirements harvesting and thr use which is than the kind for alifornia Con- smaller in C states, have a 15 or 16-foot engines, combines harvested the average, was heavy, had no of cutting. The a 15-foot or 16 men, not Ind Similar machines ha drive from the operated by one man that the combine reduces the amount of labor necessary for harvesting and threshing in the Great plains from about 3.0 man hours per acre for cut. ting with the and threshing with a stationary machine to about 0.75 man hours per acre. tors of combines cstims life of the ichine to be abou years. Their first cost ranges about £1,000 for iil ma for the large sizes. minimum crew combine is grain haulers wving a foot iuding tractor are It is estimated binder Opera from gchines to Extend ed use of the Be nt ang replacem hine may be too high To Make Combine Profitable. In order to imke the profitable he m @ ) } cut must with the not cheap binder and thresher 100 or more acres are i able for cutting. There must be 150 « more acres available fo utting wiore costs with the with a header thresher, This reckor aceount only the direct cash expenses paid by the farmer, and ment cha The minimum onomical harvest. than or Harvesting cut combine, 3 the department, is with the unless comt below Costs ationary ! : ty into takes ordinarily the necessary for the mn acreage for more o« ing depends some 1 repiace reEes achines, what on th nbine used, Farm the Great pl grain to stand for five or seven after it is ripe enough for binding be they begin harvesting with a This unavoidable delay in- creases the risk shattering. Few farmers, however, consider the losses from shattering or bleaching to be serious in this area, Harvesting attributable to the machine itself are generally less with the combine than ' with other ma- Tests made show that prop- adjusted combines separate grain efficiently as many stationary Losses due to heads left on the ground in fields on which ob- were made averaged 20 per cent of the total yield for the combine, 33 per cent for the header, and 6.1 per cent for the binder. A condensed report of the survey is cou tained In a preliminary report which obtained upon application to the United States Department of Agri- uiture, Wasl 2 Ce 1 ers In aging allow days fore from weather and losses chines, erly as hreshers, may be ington, D, C BO+OvOvOrORO Or OeO+OR i Agricultural Notes ; The best milk Is that which is kept clean, cool, and covered - * - To keep the loafer hens from eating up the profits, why not eat up the loaf: er hens? ee + » Speaking of efliciency on the farm, consider the sheep as a triple-product machine—wool, lamb, soll fertility. . » . The farmer who grows his food and . » * The value of the vegetables pro. size of a small family garden, is about £50, according to a Cornell bulletin on gardening. . - . Buck lambs are now penalized so drastically on nll the larger markets that one cannot afford to raise them, while tails on sheep went out of fash. fon when wet pastures came in, . * » Horses have tender mouths, which are sometimes made sore enough by coarse stiff hay to keep them from eat. ing freely. When such hay Is cut pretty fine It Is much less apt to cause this trouble. Inocalz tion ‘Needed Furnishes Bacteria Nodules cn Roots of the Plant. One of Boy bu test values will be missed who plant soys fall to inoc seed, says K. G. Harman of the Colle Agriculture ulation furnishes the bacteria the grea Hn crop inte sour ge of roots of and take nitrogen out This Is Important because urulsie 5 a nitrogen supply for pla and also makes | ssible for bean to without draw for this ele form noduleg on the bean alr, thie ge ing so heavily on the soll Soy beans require an average pounds of nitrogen for eacl growth, When they are pot lated all this must soil the sume as it # corn or inoculated colle does in case When they are es form in abun of this 0 frown { i wheat crop, nodul roots 40 G0 is tuken from the air and the soll, i ¢ 1 1 10d dance on pounds Nitrogen tilizer market ¢ by ent a pout Inoculation is where there the roots, Inoculatio may be s« eure d nent of the culture at inoculs nodules on from or enough hel of seed. for ote to to the method of alizes what it anting planting. saves the improves of soy very profitabl Production Records to Boost Sale of C OWS records « the Cows were added £50 to a sale aver this sale brought «0 a head, After the ss remarks heard are d the “Herd sure ring improvement asso- helped been wouldn $75." “He records those “ls 11.1 those cows.” records averaged for those COWS more than cow to pay al herd improvemer nt association costs™ in aid, “My COWS Cer. the record } faluly old ds helped a lot, Higher pt the time rices for hey are sold is but ad the several wars in surplus cows at one of herd members lue of testing, accord: ing to J. H. Brock, assistant in dairy extension at the college of agriculture, University of Illinois, wh of the Illinois ! vised, which dairy improvement association cash in on the va ere the work associations Is super Farm Manure Is Subject to Tremendous Losses Farm manure is subject to from leaching and fer mentation If it Is Improperly handled. If piled in loose heaps where it is ex posed to the rain, a large part of the and more than half of the potash will leach away. Also, under conditions, the manure ferments rapidly, with h the result that still more of the nitrogen escapes in the form of ammonia. it the manure cannot be hauled directly to the flelds as pro duced, it should be kept under shelter, and in a moist compact condition. An excellent plan is to have a mar shed where the manure Is placed when it is taken out of the stable. and other stock should be allowed ac- cess to this shed, and in this way the manure is kept thoroughly packed. The least loss will occur when the ma. nure is kept moist, compact, and un- der ghelter, tremens dous losses nitrogen such ure Calves In Planting Young Trees Firm the Soil Tightly Firming the soll tightly around the roots of young forest seedlings when they are planted is the most impor tant single item in assuring a good start and healthy growth the first year, After the seedling’s roots are covered with earth, the person doing the planting should tamp it in place by a downward thrust of his heel. When seedlings are planted on soils that have a heavy sod that produces a rank growth each year, It is often necessary to remove some of the sod so the grass will not smother or choke the little tree; a ten-inch square is usually enough and the tree should be planted in the center of the space, On thin, wornout soils such ns old pastures, however, it Is necessary only to make a slit in the sod with a grub hos ang insert the roots of the seed: ing. The refreshment booth is doing a rushing busi- ness. Monarch Cocoa and Teenie Weenie Peanut Butter sand. .» wiches are drawing the crowds. nd Bite 3 a bs Every genuine Monarch e bears the Lion Head, the oldest trademark in United States covering 8 completes line of the world's finest food roducts — Coffee, Tea, Cocoa, Catwup, Pickles, ‘ennut Butter, Canned Fruits and Vegetables, and other superior table specisitien. MONARCH Quality jor 70 Years Monarch is the only nationally sdvertised brand of Quarry Foob Peopoors sold exclusively through the men who own operate thelr own lores. REID, MURDOCH & CO. Established 1853 Pittsburgh Boston New York Jacksonville Tamps Los Angeles “Studied Under an Expert Hercules had just ane Augean stables ‘ his amazed manage su In fair weather or foul, zero nights or rainy days, 1 have always found that my car starts instantly and performs perfectly with Cham- pion Spark Plugs— they're le. Rpecinl Offerings Business Propositions Sunt feted f quick sale, personaily ine vest] ighted by our own appraiser and guar. anteed By the owners Terms arranged CARPET FEATHER CLEANING town, Pa rales 3000 A} et ie ne thon © eet vere Price $3, 3¢ File 537 MEATS AND GROCERY Donora sales IK.000 mo. very equipped ' Rerat ir counters: bargain g vice §7.0600 HOTEL AND BAR Live Penn city: cor bi 2 bathe § car garage has 20 ft. bar. ; big prof price includes Hidg $25 » STORAGE BATTERY STATION Willlamaport, Pa drive in garage: rent $40; profite $2.000 yr. Price §5.900. File 320 WRo ERY AND ATS Lansford est. 19 yea: rent $45; $40,000 wr Phi g bargain 34.000 File CONFECTIONERY LUNCHES Taylor, Pa... sales $22,060 yr. remt 335; joc. ; fxtures Prive $: B00 File 52% THE APPLE COLE COMPANY Ming - Detroit, intent t 8 AND PROPERTY What good are they If you can’t keep them? Whether you be a business man, housewife, messenger boy of pretty girl, you should learn how to protect your life, honor and property in case of burglaries, open alr or store holdups, kidnaping and attacks of other forms, Complete instructions, $2, fncluding 0 years’ protective service free. Charles W, Wenk, 150 East 38rd Bt, New York City. aT TY Due name has been nueociated Bas Annoiscements &t rea ES 3 rom Bor LO W. N. U. BALTIMORE, NO, 26-1927,