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26y - Apné.Moa of (Molntosh; 15vis- g with her sister, “Mrs, C. Lamp- oY Koor's: ice ) 4-Btf ] hmné a .brick Jokephine Parker. is spending days with relatives at Clear- at the Boston Cat X today :to - 18 employed, aft- Mayid” Phillippi teturned to eaching dities at Nebish yester- ’llter pending the week end in 5 1, m— ow’ll like'the Boston Cooking. g ? 2t11-3 oS - B.-Migkle of Minneapolis, ‘was| city-yesterday en route to his fter - looking ‘after his. farm res fi Fern Hill for a_ short 50,000 “tpeloan ‘on -farms. - The) n Land' Co.,-Bemidji, Minn. . 10-27t¢ John \Wum returned . Tuésday trom @ motor trip to Battle River, enning and other points in that vi- He reports heavy snow in N Ay o | Bpap——. . 1,078 OF HAY NOW at Courtney ‘Peed and Seed Company. !Khz%xg nd Friday nights. 1411-3 = — ¥ *'When_you next néed feed try the y-on 3rd street. 9-9¢1 F¥iehds of Ldvi Stevenson, form- ¢ of this city, have received an- ement of his marriage in Port- i 'Ore., on October 26, to Mrs. Vi- ‘Taylor, They are making thelr 6 at McMinnville, Oregon. .~ ‘Wpot e cash paid for Liberty Bonds. B. Hootey at Northern Gro- during the day, or at the hotel evenings. 7-29t1 » sure to Rear Miss Mayo-in her rsonation of ~“Pollyanna, the ftney Seed & Feed Co., where fi;- are right. At Grinager's Gro- | w. (Copyright, 19 2 PROFESSOR IN POLITICS ‘l| 1856—-December 28, TWoodrow + Wilson born at Staunton, ! raduated at Prinoeton. - 1885—Married Ellsn Loulse Ax- sen of :8avannah, Ga. 1885-8—Assoclate: professor at Bryn Mawr, . 1888-90—Professor at ‘Wesleyan ‘university in Connecticut. 902—Professor at Pringe- 1902-10—President of. Princeton. 1911-13—Governar- of -New Jer- 1913—March™ "4, Inaugurated twenty-sevénth president, _aged fifty-shc. ~ 18904 o h N ~t EITHER - Woodrow Wilson nor . his administration has yet pass-| ed into history, whose judgment on them it would be folly to try to fore-| ‘tell. Nevertheless; much of the record ‘of the pfesidency is:‘made. up and closed, and may be' summariced ‘at least, although it 18 perhaps foolhardy to venture into‘the flames of passions that blind men alike to the merits and demerits of - alinost every - president while he remains’the central figure of partisan strife. “A statesmgn is a politician who 18 d¢ad,” sald Thomas B. Reed. i el g - In this age of eurs, when men are golng to school to-learn business and farming-and all manner of vocations, Jt was natural that there should appear In:the White House a man like Wood- ‘row Wilson, who had learned politics in' the, classroam rather than in the wardroem. The elghth of our Virginla- born presidents—in nnuf,.y he is not } girl,” at M, E. church Thurs- . night. 1d11-3 e also maintain a first class re- & and alteration department in tion with “Gleaning and service. ‘hird street. -10-22t1 - Hattle Ostrander will return home at Turtle River the the week, after being-confined flammatory rheumati{sm at ome of Mrs.. John Thompson, vine avenue, for several ‘Weeks. and. gentlemen’s _suits and pressed, 75 cents. Equal r cleaning jobs. Swiss Clean- 5. 28d11-20 reryone is.going to hear Pauline # Mayo at the Methodist church ay and Friday evenings. . 1d11-3 WANTE™ cotton rags at Ploneer office. < ;Handle.Gasoline Carefully: ! dle gasoline as a mat- 8 to Its potential dangers. An h journal tells of a motoreyclist femaved the cover of his electric . bd flushed it out with petrol. jving replaced the cover he start- ‘the first’ attempt to use the result “was startling, for craghed “into the rider’s ribs. horn, was, df course, full of ex- igixture, which Waa gnited by, ric spark. ’ To Spell at Plensure. fowa' .professor urges that every #hould-be-allowed -{o spell as. he hes, to save all ning the prevailing fashion, = It #ibably would not save much time for j&: fender of such speiling.. With:the |i writer to do the writing and the bg macline to do the arithmetic. story discarded as useless, free- speliing would go ‘far to do th the need of any schools at Paul Ploneer Press, iy it " British ‘Ship Gets Record. 3 Empréss of Britain, ‘the first Risatlantic sifburning vessel to pass up the 'St Lawrende, arrived re- eflfiyuflu » from Liverpeol/in five diys’ sad’ tweoty-two hotrs, breaking afl- ] K'I # records between ' those ports. 51t her malden trip as ‘ap dli:burhier and”‘she clipped six “hours ptd’ of reconditioning’ her. as an ofl- jiFaer equaiéd the cost of ber original struction. J 2 ‘WANTED . Clean cott. n rags at Ploneer office. time spent in | “Model Dry Cleaners, |- = Woodrow Wilion' ate0: a Virginian, but the son of an Ohle clergyman and of an English mother— was @ student or .teacher of the scl- ence, or rather the art'of governing for 30 years befora he held a political ofitce. That fact was left out of their reck- oning by thé Democratic bosses of cor- rupt, ‘machine/ruled New Jersey when they summoned the president of Prince- EPWOTH LEAGUE MEETS fwill conduct meetings i} forenoons: and' afternoons ¥ ev1- {"After the :war missed {ro : then lay idle In ha > 1ONEer poel dently needed somewhere, for in ‘1919 China Imported abofihflfll),ooo worth -unabl the service,” and_since | jaunches of 1,000 tons cgpacity. each.. ob- | mhe aquatic warehouses, being exempt- e e atténded:bysthree:|: . | of them, bone huttons, composition-but- | tain cargoes due to post-war slumps In | eq from extortionate rent and ‘taxes, {:were' “made -in Japan.” The Epworth League met at the ‘home of Miss Vera Cutted, 1111 Bel- trami avenue, last ~evening. “The xegular monthly business session was followed by a social hour.. . . ST. PAUL’S TADIES AID : 3 .-MEETS JOMORROW AFTERNOON The St. Paul's Ladies’ Aid will. ndeet tomorrow afternoon at'ithe St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran church at 2:30 o'clock. -Hhe meeting will be held in the~-basement of the church, # CHUECH NOTICE Beginning on Thursday evening ¥t 8 o'clock and icontinuing:over Friday, Saturday and Sunday, the Fosston Circuit of the Free Luthfran church during the in. the Aardal church, town of Frohn, and in the evenings ‘at \the Nymore church. The following pastors will| be present: J. Martinson of Foss- ton; J. B..Land of Mapleby; George |Larson of Thief River Falls; George [Nilson of Bagley; H. Bode of lard. T A 3 Alf are cordially invited. O. P. Grambo, Pastor. MISSES LATTIN\ENTERTAIN _ AT HALLOWE'EN PARTY A Hallowe’en party wis Eiven on Sunday évening at the home of Clar- ice' and Vera Lattin. Twenty-four guests were invited toespent a pleas- ant evening. Appropriate decora- tions were used thrwewt the rooms and a very pleasant time is reported. Those in attendance %ere Lilllan Edwards, Margaret Heggie, Viola Le- Fleur, Margaret Robideau, Hazel Hudson, Vera Lattin, Clarice Lattin, Luck Brose, Luck Jeremy, Alice Me- Kinnon, 'Vivian Letford, Blanche Robideau, Lawrenge Johnson, Fran- cis Hansen, Howard Clark, Noel Hanses, Ulysses Avery, Jerry Baily, Vincent Johnson, Joseph McKinnon, Earl Burgar, James Burgar, Mr. and Mrs. Letford and Mrs. Naish McKin- uon. Refreshments were served from small pumpkin shells and all depart- ed at a late hour, after a pleasant evening. i HAS SEIZED, GERMAN TRADE ‘Japan Said to Be Furnishing Practl -cally All”of the Buttons Now Used in China. Mal- The style has changed In Manchuria that, Jusc' after the establishment of the republic, ‘'set many Chinese wear- ing the garments of the West, and needing naturaily western buttons. Snch. buttons, says Consul General Al- | bert W. Pontius, writing home from Mukden to his government, were jm- | ported about” equally from Japanese end European manufacturers, but now the Chinese have pretty well gone back to their own style of dress, and the one European' garment that still re- mains popular is the heavy ulster. One n6 longer needs buttons, except for one's ulster,’and these gre now chiefly imported from Japan, for the Chinese costume_does very. well with “frogs.” ton university from 'the golf links one|’ afternoon in the fall of 1910.to receive for governor. When L novice in ‘politics -de- clared, as he floundered through what, as he had to own up, was his first po- ltical spéech, that if elected governor ern, the politiclans nudged .and laughed in their sleeves ‘at the ides- of a professor-iry- ing to run sheir machine. - They laugh- ed outlond when:they saw,him actual- 1y-sit down in.the governor’s chair and begin to play polifics out of a book. ©Of all things, it was a book which he ‘bimself had written in- his youthful school days merely as a thesis for his PhD. at Johns Hopkins. The young graduate-student made the discovery that our Constitutiorr created a vac- ] wum, which.the bosses had rushed in \to fill. v Alas, popular leadership is neither 1 sclence nor an art that can be taught jout of a book. ; ‘Where' other leaders ' of ‘our: democ- /racy have appesled to the emotions, he '8 one of the’least electric, least dra- matie ‘of our presidents, with no-anec- dotes to popularize him, with.no leg- ends of his youth or myths about his political -career:to vitalize him :to the ] general imagination. He owes his va- rious succéssés at the polis to the cdld logic of the political situation and little to’his popularity. His academlc aloof- ness from politics, at a time when pol- cians had fallen into disfavor, made him the available man for governor in 1910. As a candidate for president, he ran a poor second to Champ Clark in the popular primaries of 1912. He was nominated at Baltimore only after 45 ballots, and then .only as a result of Bryan’s overthrow of the steam roller. | And he was elected by the division of . the Republicans between Roosevelt and | Taft, though he received a smaller vote than - the Democrats Mad polled in ! three past elections. It is the tragedy of Woodrow Wil- son’s nature that when the elements were mixed in him, magnetism was de- uled him, that lodestone which deaws the hearts of men. The head has been the powerhouse of his leadership. Bubscribe “for The Daily Pionéer. AR i N THOMAS H , INCE PRESENTS “INithic.and Neolithic periods. He says: : | mediate period s called in, France, shipping. tons, and mother-of-pea Taking advantage of about 85 per cent of buttons, and se buttons 'he war has \ this eircum- And 0 it 18, says Consul Geperal Pon- on. Before the war China was import- ing approximately $900,000 wogth of needles a_year,' chiefly from Gclrmany 1000 _tons each_in_the_harbor_of Kobe, and ‘Austria; but now the Japanmese | T T oo — {|meedle manufactorers control the Chi- mese market, and. that s sad for the | Chinese, yeedlewoman or ; needleman, § becauge'thé Japanese needles do mot ‘keep their sharp points anything like as || [long. as*the European needles.—Chris-. | tian Science Menthly. 4 FIND MAKES SCIENTISTS GLAD | “From Grand Opera to. Ragtime” } ce Comedy, Talking. Singing and Danciag ° - HOOD-BERSEL & MELL “Musical Moments WALLACE REID in “The Man From' Funeral Ran, have now been recognized in Scotland . in the island of Oransay, adjoining | . o LA verion It et REX SUN DAY has been given to this period Iz Scot- 'CHARLES RAY fand.” = 7. - The Risga excavationg disclosed re- His Second New Picture As Hosiah Howe, the rural mains of the Oransay man’s dw_vellln"v’ places, with his food, refuse and rude rube with Wall Street ‘wisdom in tools, made of flint, jasper, quartz and “PEACEFUL Discoverles, of great interest to || agchaeologists have been made on the™| Island’ of Risga, in Loch Sunart, Am’ gyleshire, ‘Scotland, where a band of scientists has been searching in huge shell ‘mounds. ¥ The director of the party is of the opinion. that the discoveries made in this rocky and uninhabited island have gone far to scttle the dispute among archaeologists as to whether a break intervened In the human occupation of the British isles between Palaeo- ! “Vestiges . of human activity ex- tremely like the ‘Azilian,’ as the inter- quartzite, ‘horn bone, and ‘many large implements made from the ant. lers of the red déer. k NOW WAREHOUSES ON WATER Japanese 8aid’' to Have Evolved a' Soheme That Is Ingenious and . _/Profitable as Well. b The time may probably come when the land is overcrowded and people begin to live on water. Then we shall be bullding floeting- skyscrapers and aquatic park& At any rate, congenlal Japanese have already launched a scheme which in the opinion of the projectors hits many ' birds by ene stone. The schemedis the creation of whet 1s_called floating warehouses. During ' the war Japan built many good-sized wooden ships to aid In the transportation of . the | allies’_goods. REX To-Day Last “The Boomerang” with Henry B. Walthall NATIONAL PICTURES Remember Sol Smith Rus- sell’s dear old play? This «is it in Films, Time eS"rom " FEATURING BWALT i i P .LOVE—the Eternal God, solves the great problem of - Severed hearts, Wall Street and the empty dinner pail. Has the babe born in poverty equal rights with the lap dog of the millionaire? i “After all that the world has suffered on the battlefields of Europe, §s it still true in our country that ‘Might Makes Right'?” ; WILLIAM FOX presents “BRIDE 13” Rex Union Orchestra Matinee 2:30—10c and 25¢ Evenings 7:20 and 9:00—10c and 30c o S————————————————————————— statice,'a group of men organized a | vantages consequential to thelr mova- ‘| given' Japan almost & monopoly; one |-concern called the Marine Warehouse | ble character = shall be" able, It 18- might say that Japan buttons China. | company, with a capital of 10,000,000 | claimed, to carry on thée business at a 2 yen; bought the_wooden ships and | much lower rate with greater facility, tius, with needles to sew ‘the buttons | started a floating warghouse business. | providing a formidable enemy; in the The company {s now engaged In es- | future, of their: terrestrial .cousins.— tablishing eight floating warchouses of | East and West News. - = _l and largely free from the danger of fire, 1n addition to many peculiar ‘ad- THE WANT YOU WANT.TO. GET YOU WANT "THE GREAT WANT GETTER, “GRAND =2~ TONIGHT | Dorothy Phillipps in a picturization of the famous novel’ by Chatles Nelville Buck ‘DESTIN In “The Heart of Humanity,” she was Nanette, the innocent child cf the Northwoods; in “Hell Morgan’s{Girl” she was a dapce hall creature; in “DESTINY” she is successively a school- irl, a young ‘woman in wonderously beautiful gowns, moving in New York’s most exclusive smartset, and as a young. f’rm woman. ‘A Swiftly Moving Drama Vividly Portraying the Coni- trast Between New York with Its Gay Society - Life, and the Restful (,:ountry BRAY PICTOCRAPH & CUMPS CARTOON COMEDY 7:30 and 9:00 lOc and-25¢ — This is a superfeature adapted from the famous stage play of the same name that convulsed the country afew years'dgo. It is packed full of heart interest and laughs. ELKO == REX SATURDAY “TARZAN of the APES” From the Original Story by Edgar Ricé Bdrroughs TONIGHT. & THURSDAY OF THE APES DROVE HIS Tou% DEEP INTO THE LION . B ————— S TS THE -BEMIDJI PIONEER ~. o