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...THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER .the stage where family ties become more binding and the love of children makes them cling to life at all costs, m ER TmRTY-HVE London's leading-ladies in the poli- tical, educational, and social world are all at least thirty-five. Some have an extra bit tacked on to their years. Lady Rhondda, the “superwoman of the business world,” is thirty-seven. ' Ngrthv;eiieffi News SESTABLISHED SYSTEM OF LIOUOR TRAFFICIS . " BROKEN UP BY POLICE (By United Press) _London. - (By Mail).—Cheer up, women! The first thirty-five years of life are the worst. According to Dr. Josiah Oldfield, who has made a life-long study of ‘AN IMMIGRANT'S SON women and their woes, women are happiest and: at their best from the age of thirty-five onward. ““The popular idea that the young ___in.an era of unbridled ex- travagance, when, on the surface, men appear to have lost all sense of proportion, that which is How She Proposes. Women do propose though they do not say outright, “Jack, I love youl ‘Wil you please be my husband?’ They sometimes do as did Alice and her 1767—March 15, Andrew Jack- , son born. in Union coun- Station Agents and Trainmen| NG woman is queen of the earth and has| griend Fred. They had been singing, 2 pi 3 the world at her feet is a fallacy.” 3 - Assisted in Sm in 1781—Tak risoner by the 4 and Alice searched through the music S : 181 Smug; gling 781 on - P . Dr. Oldfield confided to a gathering| ¢\ gho found a wong entitled, “T soun d, an d 200 d, and t e, is British. 1791—Married Mrs. Rachel Don- ; aldson Robards. ‘Winnipeg, 1808—Killed Charles Dickinson ostablished: syste _In_a duel. between Manitoba and 1818—January 8, won the Bat- tie of New Orleans. he south has been broke: D nitoba mounted police, states Com- 1817-18—Put down the Seminole The liquor was| i Indians in Florida: way of the Great Nor- 1821—Governor of the territory hern railway, which runs into Port- of Florida. lage 1a Prairie and Brandon. Liquor of medico-legal authorities. *This discovery s based not.on mere theory, but on the comparative number of men and women suicides after the age of thirty-five. “Life undoubtedly becomes more pleasant and attractive to women aft- er they have reached this age. More young women commit suicide be- tween the ages of fifteen and thirty- five than young men, but once thirty- five is attained the position is en- tirely reversed. in love with you.” Handing it to Fred she sald “Do you know it?" Fred looked stunned, and ignorigg the song she held out to him, he said, “No, 1 didn’t know it, but I certainly am glad to hear you say so.”” And shortly Alice was wearing an engagement ring. But sometimes it works the other way. A young man was taking a,girl home on a beautiful moonlight evening. Looking into his eyes she sald, “Er—I'm not going to get mar- more admired, and more desired, than ever. . THE Northern Natiomal ’ : ould be brought to near the boun- : d MNind “Men suicides are largely in the 4 dary and stored in section houses an 8 rled until you do.” He asked why, and 1ev);t.ors and when the opportunity NDREW, JAOKBON. the wnlet- | majority. § she replied “Because so long u' you i across ' the tered backwoodsman, treading 8t| Dr. Oldfield thinks the reason Wo-| are single there is hope.” wat alas | men are so much happler after thir-| pe took her h ty-five is because they have passed .:d never ;“wm::r :l::h:e'tt her there the sharpest contrast to be seen in|the jdeals of .girlhded and reached the procession of presidents. disillusionment. They have reached ¥ large sums to take the risks they did.| T, o et Drogident born In‘a 108 liquor - would be 9 — 3‘.’;‘;2:;"‘3; ‘3:):15 t‘})e ditches and | €abin, Jackson ‘could not claim as his right ot way at a place previously | OWR even,that lowly- (!Welllnz in the designated, and picked up by boot- North Carolina forest, but entered the _For this trainmen world homeless and fatherless. Sprung igh as $1,000 to $1,-| from. poor Irish immigrants, his.par- 4 job for their work and small| ents had-been In the country only two fos were made, 80 high Is the| years when the fdther sank Into ®n ce -prevailing in the Dakotas and uomarked grave 8 few. days et innesota for good liquor. Andréw’s birth, 1aving his before Water tanks ‘werg also x:mdt}e} e‘:ze Withiout & Foof”or an acre, mf til the trains' drew out. - # ey e, . § ;Fu::‘a station north of Gretna,|. N '..‘:’ml' !z:"% .:l::?::lrludul where there is no station agent, was im" Bkt ) OM mlt favorite dumping point. Shipments o lefghcy of er memories as “wer care of by 'bootlegger thed watehmen, section hands were all'in- volved in the uncovering of the sys- tem, Commissioner Rattray said. Sev- en men were arrested and heavily fined and warrants are out for others if they ever cross the line into Can- ada again. They were all cogs in the whiskey running machine. Jig- gers were used as a itransport at times. Station ageiits were also fined and dismissed for not keeping recqrds of shipments made over the line with- out revenue being paid; half a dozen pleadéd guilty. Many claim they do not care; they are independent for life. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS = ... WILL MEET MONDAY the heels of John Quincy Adams, the ‘most cultured in all the line, presents DAILY PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS subscribe for The P-onear help to them were taken sch dred ‘and left him, st the world. ; R /A ragged, roving walf of the Revo- Jution, he ‘grew up as' wild as a weed. With no band above him, his high spirits led him into the temptations o * ¢ "Minneapolis, Aug. 7.—Knights of Pythias. from all parts of the United States will be here Monday for the national concave. Fred E. ‘Wheaton, -supreme keeper of records and seals, " “has, practicauny completed arrange- ments for local entertainment. ¥ (Governor Burnquist and mayors of both Minneapolis and St. Paul plan ‘to deliver addresses of welcome at the convention. s The convention will open Monday ““'night at the church of the Redeemer: ‘Charles S. Davis of Denver, supreme Cnancellor, will preside. e il B AW LEARN MUCH IN QUIET HOU Cultivation of Habit, and Attitude of Listening Is Matter of First Importance. Andrew Jackson. Cultivate the habit of listening, as you would the lungs, muscles or mem- ory. See to 4t that you listen with ! every ‘sense alert to all that is going .on in this vast panorama about us. ‘Cultivate, too, the habit of listening . when you are alone. If it Is in the alsles of a vast forest, listen to-the myriad voices all around you, the song if ot thé streams, the murmur of the .1 pines, swish of leaves and epic of oak and elm. If it is alone in your room. ke a few moments for quiet medita- tNn, and listen to the. still “small " God's messenger, speaking to you* of the Inner thoughts and life which only he and you can under- -gtand. It is only by thus “lowly listen- i ing” that we can hear the right word for our guidance. There is always time to listen, for by listening 1 mean an attltude .of mind and heart rather than a particu- lar time or place in which to exercise the art. The time and place for its cultivation is here, there, now and al- ways, wherever we are, whatever we may be doing. It iIs Surprising how much more the listeriers of ‘the world -accomplish than’ they who are blind, deaf and unrespomsive to the' great possibilities in this life that is ours.— Elsye Tash Sater in Christian Herald. his primitive world, whose social staridards were 200 years behind the times. \Drlnklng, and carousing, gam- bling, cock fighting- and horse racing, .young Jackson mever took a dare, the ! rastic sport once staking his horse and | his @il on a“throw of the dice. Al bully among rowdies, he went his roy-, stering way along a road that is not to be lald down on the map of conduet as a course to_the White House. f As he rose from a chore boy and a saddler’s apprentice to be a lawyer: and a judge of the Supreme -court of Tennessee, he cast aside the dissipa- tions of his careless youth, but he never lost the spirit of the-.clansman 2 or subdued his ungovernablegqtemper. A bare catalog of his quarrels and i fights 1s too long to be given here. In i most of them he was fired with the ¢ conviction that he was defending the name of his wife. This had been i brought into question-only by his own " characteristic imprudence, when he = féll in love with his landlady’s daugh- ter, while she was yet married to an- other, and when he rashly wed her without walting to verify the mere ru. i mor that her offended husband bad - obtained a divorcé in a neighboring state. After two years of wedded life, the too hasty couple learned that the woman's first marriage had only just ; ) been dissolved and they bad to make I ¥ a spectacle of themielves as they went < through another ceremony in order te be united in lawful bonds. Because - his own impulsive con- duct had exposed his honest, devoted wife to the slanderous_tongues of the joiath i = B gossips, Jackson was all the more sen- ; . sitive to her sufferings. For sneering at her over a bar oné man was stood up at 24 paces and shot to death by F. the avenging husband® who kept his ] pistols in perfect condition through 3t } years, as Barton says, for anyone who dared breathe her name except in| H { honor, = Even at the sober age of forty-Six, B Jackson plunged into a tavern brawl . RN | at Nashville with Thomas H. Benton, IR ymium, scandium, samarium and | afterward the distinguished senator i lers as much unknown to us of-to- ‘| grom Missouri, and was shattered for . as tungsten was to our fathers. life by two balls and a slug wmch! . Benton's brother shot into his baek. Practical Christianity in -mdi:'cted That was his last personal nlteramm.g g (o:Wour_model farms are ‘mm; 4 In 8 few weeks he was called from his ; with the Scotch Presbyterian OB | pog o pain to take part in a publical- V& HE first appeal of our five-passenger “Glenbrook™ i model is,quinf properly, its - exquisite beauty and distinctiveness, To merely look at the car is a pleasing experience. The second appeal develops upon acquaintance with one of the most remarkable power plants in the entire field of six cylinder engineering. Thus admi- ration is supplemented by profound respectand both appeals merge intq Pride of Ownership. This new Paige motor is an unusua} achievement. It is the result of more than three years of patient research and experiment. It is actually and literally a product of our war time experience. 4 Metals That Call for Use. Of the metals now known, more than 50 in number, Dr. E, E. Slossons notes that not one-half have come into ccommon use. The so-called rare ele- ments are really abundant enough, considering the earth’s crust as a whole, though they are so thinly scat- . tered that ~they are usually over- looked and hard to extract. But when- . ever one of them proves valuable it is soon found available. A systematic search generally reveals it somewhere in sufficient quantity to be worked. Who, then, it is asked, will be the first er a use for indium, germa- terbium, thulium, lanthanium, Furthermore this power plant is an altogether dis- tinctive product—conceived by our own engineers and built in our own plants by our own workmen. It represents in fullest measure all that the Paige nameplate implies. : . Molor Inn ¢ Phone 78 312 Bell. Ave. <sion at Chingleput. South In- ::]rll:l "\‘“;?l““ Native Christians are tercation, between the United States . et o < Phemselves. 500 Grent Boale A0, Wi DI e g : eug 4 stil! , he rose to do 01 1 g G oo Ilicsoidink o U ok g attle for PAIGE-DETRO!T MOTOR CAR COMPANY, DETROIT, Michigan Subscribe for the Plonesr. ) W