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" mecessity of an immediate revision of h n - Nk Bible Conference—Baptist church, Sept. 19-26. . . Sept. 23—First day of autumn. Sept. 24-25—Clearwater county fair at Bagley. » October 12.—-Dl§covery of America, 1492. Nov. 2.—Presidential election day.] Nov. 11.—Armistice day. ~ Nov. 25—Thalksgiving day. ENGLISH DEFENSE ON RHINE, NOT ON THAMES By Henry Wood) (United Press Correspondent) Paris, Sept. 5. (By Mail.)—Eng- land hereafter must defend herselt from the Rhine and not from the ‘Thames. . . Thanks to the present perfection of long range artillery, not to men- tion its future possibilities as well as aerial warfare. England faces the ‘her whole system of national defense. This is the declaration of General Hirschauer, one of the most disting- unished military chiefs that the French army produced during the war, and now member of the French senate. . From now on, the English navy, however powerful is may be, will no Jonger be sufficient to maintain Eng- land’s “proud isolation,” declares General Hirschauer. Up until 1914, the lines of defense for London were situated- at 16 to 20 kilometers outside the . capital. During the war England found it necessary to establish its London de- fenses on the Continent. Now, ac-| cording to General Hirschauer, Eng- Jand’s sole hope of defending its cap- tal is to establish these lines of de- fense either on the Meuse or on the Rhine. Gneral Hirschouey points out that at the present time England’s ®ntire ‘plans of national defense are still Dased on the imperial decree:of 1888. The keynote of this decree, and as a consequence of England’s system of defense is found in the following clause: b : “The defense of the Thames pre- sents a great importance, because large military establishments and ar- senals are situated en both sides of the river, and ahove all because ev- ery landing on British soil will have for its object the capture of London.” As a consequence the British plan for home defense provided that the moment mobilization was ordered the LTI CrRAN MINNESOTA WINNERS AT SIOUX CITY FARR St. Paul, Sept. 20.—Leslie Mitchell ermanent army should at once take of Worthington, Cecil Benton of Fair- gp a position a};ong the coast of the :"i‘:" and Elroy Thompson of Ma- ;‘:lléelsavgldh. gatr’;, city sanitary en-| ——————————== : 3 t elia are representing Minnesota boy | 8!neer, . Robinson and Frank channel and the North sea for the| = . girl club workers in .the stock|Hughes, Were“in the county jail to- MEAT CAUSE OF purpose of “covering London.” Then|, o ;0" con’ contest opened at the|day. Carr issald to have admitted e e d T as soon as the troops of defense Interstate fair at Sioux City today. netting about $70 monthly from. the K_IDNEY ROUBLE —— were mobilized, the permanent arm 1 : was to become &n arnr?y of manoeuvm{ Tl;; junior club members of 11 other fi{ty i:l _1::1: said ‘by Commissioner| : 1 iti a ded |mid-west states have been requested ‘+enzell today. L 4 B n addition London was defended |[WICTRERE B8 58 VS 2000 T ion y Take Salts to Flush Kidneys If Back Hurts or Blad- der Bothers " i E. RAMLLTON OF ~JUDGE.? CITY ENGINEER JAILED x;mrely because they had formerly = een in government employ. This FOR SImI‘I,mG PROFITS grm has ztihigrbed many Whiteéhall i appers an eir services are re| t- St. Paul, Sept. 18.—Charged with ed as giving as much satisfaétlop:ras sphtting profits from double entries|those of any other class of employee. on the City sprinkling wagon pay ' . by rapid fire guns that were supposed = g to Yo sufficlent to prevent a landing and most of them will be represented. “WHITEHALL FLAPPERS” Minngeota’s team was selected ‘last ARE MAKING GOOD ‘of enemy troops, lines of torpedoes were placed to prevent the apl‘;romh week after district contests had been of troop ships. long range coast guns were to ward off the enemy. vedhels, still in auvance of“all this passive de- fense, gunhoats, torpedo boats and coast guard cruisers were to be en- gaged in active defense while furthed in advance the British fleet was sup- posed to smash the enemy fleet before it oot within smelling distance. Now, according to General Hir- schauer, all of this has been render- ed out of date and useless by the development of long range guns and aerial fighting. England’s only hope of defending her capital and ..erself must hereafter be made from the Meuse or the Rhine. g:;:-ir;:t ‘&‘;‘;’g:&tg& ;:":::;;; :f;fl London. (By ‘Mail.)—The much| If you must have your meat evers Be nda'rded by the Interstate Fair as- maligned. “Whitehall Flappers” have-dqy, eat it, but' flush your Kidneys sociation to the members of the team made good. N with s:'llts ogeasionally, says 4 noted Vinning the grand champlopship. in| A0, those young giils who during |autbority who tells .us that meat the Sioux City judging contest. The thé war scandalized their sober bre-|forms uric acid which almost paraly- Minnesota Livestock Breeders 55661 thren in government offices with|zes the kidneys in their efforts to ex- ation promotes junior livestock judg- their cups of tea, and powder-puffs pel it from the blood. They become ing work by paying all expenses of are no longer recognizable as ‘‘flap- sluggish -and weakep, then you suf- fi pers.” They are distributed in all|fer with a dull misery in the kidney the Minnesota team to Sioux -City.|; 14 h ins in theé back J. S. Montgomery, livestock-specialist rectjons. A . ATeElon, snath Dains . In acs ot~ from University Farm, accompanies A small minority of the ultra-mis- sick henduphe_s, dizziness, your stom- the team. B chite:'iousfh:v: tghoue back toj thltta par- :fit fme}h This bfa;nous lsla]t.s i; made . |ental roof, but the great majerity are!thé weather is bad you have rheuma- (‘I‘;x;)w:)e:r:ge;rf‘;’;isj:las?‘?:xngltf":; working hard to get the Oid Country |tic twinges The urine gets cloudy, contest with like teams h‘om'oiher on its commercial feet and they are|full of sedxmen.t, the channels often mid-west states for free trip to the to be found in banks, lawyer’s offi-|get sore and irritated, obliging you to O e ‘mrsch'mé; International Livestock show to be f{gs,dand big commercial houses of all igek §el';ft two or three time during .« Rays . & N inds. ) e night. who is one of the world’s greatest 2:}&,5 (chr:l‘g)?é Ng:fi:’,‘x‘;s;t§7 t}°{ ?:; When the piping days of peace| - To neutralize these irritating acids, experts on artillery, “we’ first discoqucmmmic‘s team is composed ofOVl- closed scores-of government depart-|to cleanse the kidneys and flush off ered the gun with 120 kilometers vian Anderson Magdelene Clausen ments, there was a general reluctance the body’s urinous waste get four range. Shortlv, this range was ex-| o plonehe K'eller members of the|3MONg employers to give these girls a|ounces of Jad Salts from any phar- tend to 150 kilometers. Soon we will Opportunity Bread{’naiflng .club of trial. However, some of the more en-|{macy here; take a tablespoonful in a be rat 200 kilometers and the Mmit| " —v e h " The livestock and crop terprising came forward and engaged | glass ol water before breakfast for a then will not have been reached. team Ia c(;mposed of -Harold Aito; batches of ®hem - régardless of the few days and your kidneys will-thev “Tt is just 150 Kilometers from Ca-|jarence Bunnell and Emil Eri&ksog' attention they paid to silk stockings|act fine. This famous salts is made lais or Bonlogne to London. Fecamp. members of the Grand Rapids pomt6 and powder-puffg—and from in- frcyn the acid of ,grapes and lemon! Pieppe. Abbeville, Aire and Furnes growing club. quiries made by the United Press,|juice, combined with lithia, and has are only 200 kilometers away. _|they have not regretted it. been used for generations to flush and “But the bombardment by long The secretary of a large shipping|stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to range guns will only be the second Bullding Houses In China. firm declared that the girls are “much | neutralize_the acide in urine, so it act of the next war which will begin| Al lumber for bullding in OChina is |more assiduous than men in their | no longer irritates, thus ending blad. with aerinl bombardment. The air-i yougne 1n the log, says H. K. Richard- work.” = der weakness. planes that were in construction son, writing in Asla magazine. Assoon A representative of Harrod’s de- Jad Salts is inexpefsive; cannot 2t th?t clns‘pgr(\)fo thtg v;g; h;?l a flt‘ghs! i 'tho logs begin to arrive .the cons partmder&t store said they had not|injure, am}) makes a delightful effer- capacity o () lometers, turned down any applicants for posts!vescent lithia-wate: nk. pamelv a vovage of 450 ..iometers| tractor tackles them with the saw- - Y pop i s il SHAR from the point of departure. Aix-la-| yers. These men are pald plece rates Chapelle is just 450 kilometers from | which average about three cash or Tandon. A sauadron starting' from | one-tenth of a cent per square foot of this point can bombard London with-| surface sawed. They average a bet- in three hours. « ter wage than a carpenter, getting “London in the future will be at-| ahout 10 cents a day, as compared tackable first by aerial squhdrons| with 8 cents a day tor’ the carpenter. starting from German soil and then At this rate they are cheaper '.hanl hv 1ong ran~e zuns placed on the t v mill th pe Pelefan and French cosst. any steam saw mill that can operate , in China. In fact, the only reason & saw mill can operate in China at all “As a corcermence French friend ehin, the soliditv of the French and Belgian armies form for England her Is because It can produce quickly and best defense of “‘couverture” on the| with a more even thickness than the are carried forward to the Meuse. made by hand. Thrée Chinese carpen- continent. Through them - the ad-| native sawyers. The necessary doors, vance linés of defense for London| frames and window sashes are all “The defense of -London is no long- er on the channel; it isn’t even—on the Boshporus. “It is on the Rhine.” ters at 8 cents a day with their-na- tive tools can accomplish about the same work done by one Canadian car- penter with all eqpipment. The work is well done if well supervised. In comparison, I should say_that about five Chinese carpenters at 8 cents a day each are necessary to do the work of a Canadian carpenter who recelves $6 a day and has all his wood pre- pared for him. : it There will be a. " MEETING OF THE STOCKHOLDERS : "o okl . , CAPTAIN BEST NOW b AFTER “WURST” MARINE Washington, Sept. 20—When Cap- tain' Newton Best, commanding a company of Marines at the Pearl Harbor naval station in Honolulu, read that Private C. R. Wurst had Dbeen_declared by Brig. Gen. Smedley D. Butler as the smartest sea-soldier at Quantico, Va., he immediately filled out a requisition ~“blank for Whurst. The form followed, although not strictly according to General Hoy- le, read: “It is requested that Wurst be put in Best’s company.” Now it ~is up to Wurst whether he wants to serve a few thousand miles from his home in ~Elizabeth, N. J. Out in Honolulu the ukeleles are tuning up to the refrain, “The Wurst is yet to come.” - Pan Motor Company ‘ of ST. CLOUD - . _in Christianson’s Hall NYMORE ON TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 21st at 8 o’clock All stockholders in this vicinity are urged to attend. A representative from St. Cloud-will be present. Bé sure to come. Marriage lotteries are still in vogue during October in some parts. of In- dla. The names of both sexes eligi- ble for marriage are written on slips of paper and put Into separate earth- enware jars. The local wise man draws one of each kind and the youth whose name is drawn obtains a letter of introduction to the young woman whose hame accompanies his, after ‘which the courting commences. ———— —— An Actual Lottery. ‘ reader and a wiseacre for statistics, He found the man poring over an en- cyclopedia. . there will be too,” replied the man, looking up from his book of knowl- edge. i ) | the man with deadly “every fourth child born in the world 13 a Chinaman!”"—Saturday Evening Post. New York Medical Journal. It is well to have a hobby which can be used as | = but when it begins to ride you it is better to look about for another stead 2 IIIIIIlllllllllIllllllllIII||IIIlllllllIllIllllllllIlIIlll“lllllllillllll"l MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 20, 1920 ) Vital Statistics. ' _ ‘One of the census men called al the - ome of a workingman In New York,| oted in his nelghborhood as a great| ALLWIRE GOARATEED Union Dentists BEMIDIJI Opposite City Hall Schroeder Bldg. “How many children have you?" sked the census taker. “] have just three—and that’s all “All right, by why so positive?” “According to this book here,” sald serlousness, - Good Sewint, Poor Master. It is well to have a hobby, says the o faithtul at. It 15 well to h : I':)bfiy n:eg:; as yo: wcin rldearz SUBSCRIBE EOR TH; ° DAILY PIONEER 'AlllIII'IlllllIIlIIIIIlIllIIIIIIllllI Whether you want a- CARLOAD or 7j-ust a hundred pounds of Hay, Oats, Corn, Barley, Bran, Shorts, Salt, Dairy Feeds - or Chicken Feeds TRY US Courtney Seed & Feed Co. Seed, Feed and Potatoes Phone 851~ Office at Sunshine Grocery :IIII|llIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllIllIIl!llll_lilllIllllllll Lower Food Prices “Of all gasoline manufactured in the United States, 67.6% is used by automotive vehicles.” - (Oil News, 7-5-1920, P. 42.). “Of all the motor vehicles in use in the Middle West, 65% of the total registration are farmer- owned” (Arthur Capper Address, 1920). Gaso- line is taking the place of vanishing man-power on the farms; and not only does it reduce the man-hours required to produce a given amount N of food, but it also reduces the actual cost of production, and this despite the advancing orice of gasoline. (H. W. Quaintance “Influence of Farm Machinery-on Production” Power Wagon Reference Book, 1920, page 561.) Authorities agree that gasoline is a most import- \ ant factor in the production and distribution of ¢ food products. 3 T When gasoline is employed universally to in- crease the-efficiency of man-power on the farm, we may look for vastly increased production and a consequent decrease in the cost of pro- ducing food. ; & - In the eleven Middle West states served by the Standard. Oil Campany (Indiana) more than /100,000 €ractors are in use, and the number is In the states served by the Standard Oil Com- pany (Indiana).the number of farmer-own motor trucks is as follows: . . Kansas . B . . 1,732 Iowa o . . 2,773 Illinois . . . . 2,261 N Indiana . . . . 1,548 North Dakota . . . 501 ) South Dakota . . S 1,708 Michigan . . . . - 1636 . Minnesota . . . 1,255 Missouri . . . . 2,065 W isconsin . . S 1,465 A Oklahoma . . . 723 = e Total . . . 17,667 (U. S. Department of Agriculture states that only about 75% of total farmer ownership was reported.) The distribution service of the Standard Oil Ccmpany (Indiana) brings petroleum products quickly and cheaply to the farm when they are most needed. e It is the plan of this Company to makeits distribution facil- ities the most perfect system of its kind in the world. To do this, largely increased equipment is being installed. To supply this vast network of stations, trucks, tank wagons, etc., the Manufacturing Department is bending its energies to devise means for producing an ever increasing percent- age of gasoline from the crude oil obtainable, and at the same time to keep users of other products of petroleum supplied with their needs. . - Standard Oil Coinpariy (Indiana) 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago 2256