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Pt ey e T b s ket fTh - T0 HOI.D DAIRY SCHOOL ?xcommeted the scoring for that aggre- ‘@' ; Achenbadh one. Smith completed the é iyt Actordings ol /a coh;mn wluc%:whnsml?ee;: used in the' :l‘(fielhhcr Journal sinee last-mid-summ that | commupity must be ' the .p)ormsui‘ sadjuster- reads:; “Today | be 100 deg.” But we'll mee that it ‘seldom. Keeps its -an’t Seem Reasonable— ‘He’s Not Alone in the World Our- printer’s devil says that last winter f? ‘' had water 6n' the brain and it froze. Now 'things slip. his mind. Some deyill We;think- he's:a pretty slippery fellow. If it was water on the ! kneé we might suggest that he wearj pumps. t 5 —And Rubber Boots— { Not While Conscious oK A United Suies senator says that| conscience should be the guide of his fellow members in voting on the beer proposition t6‘comeé before the sen- ate. He evidently ‘6vorlooks the fact that men do not drmk ‘eer with thm‘ consciénee, ", > It Can't Be Done— ' | " Deviled Eggs | A young lad who is always looking for a new bag of tricks says that one way to do something devilish is to throw ‘an egg into an electric’ fxzn But, according to_our: ¢pinion; using an electric ‘fan fhese days would be | devilish' enoagh. = —How B¢ K By You?— I Days of Old No déubt but that it will be good news to ' the majority of the old- fashioned péople to héar there is still one of their favorites alive. We |15 met him on Beltrami aveniue the other day. He wanted to know where he' could find an npotheurys shop. We told him that some of thé drug stores | still carried them. —He' _Seenml Su:pnsed— Helps the Imagination Frequently in the best of regulated newspaperi ‘you” see where a "pi" line has not been niarked out in the proof and it has slippéd’ the eye of the make-up mln‘ lt uaually hnppans| of T, in’ an itém like thi Mrs. Mary Amm Jones; at last| g 4n, nigat’s ball ‘wore. a-very. becoming costume. of pale silk.trimmed with ctaoinshrdigem: Then. - the - editor )oses another friend, the proofreader, makes anoth- er New ‘Year's resolution, and the make-up man - laughs ‘up hh sleeve after the indignant editor is out)of g ... But, then, it must be admitfed|’ that the editor has to get a laugh|’ out of -it some place, so he ‘finally does after he gets cooled down. —Then It Happens Again— .~ Helpless Hints . H you havd' a family skeloton, don’t let her expose her shoulder blades in a backless _evening . gown. Small towns.in this country. are expected to put in a clamorous re- quest soon for a battleship fon the| public square, Our idéa of a diplomat is a man who can persuade his wife that she looks just-as welk in cotton stockings] as Anfimk(}h i ne Christmag present for youy: neighbor is a bottle f‘"‘M}"‘t o e of hair restorer} 03t of “those people’ who knocking the spirit’ of cnmb.f.f.fi would be knocking something “elesc if no Christmas were being observed. —-Meny (‘hnstmas— ormntl 0 from this Echool w‘%fi‘%& g put l%|to practice, wou]d\enablc him ‘to: make his cows more profitable; show up the “board- er cow”, and choose a breed more wigely, . Program’ 10:00 a, m. - ecmre on selection of foundation stock. 10:80 a: m.—Judging stock demon- | stration. 111300 a, m.—Feed requirements o( dairy cattle 11:30 a. dal feed stul 100 p. m.— ompntahon of rations. 2‘0: t]t:i&m‘—bofl:uro on dairy bree;ll of ca 2:30 .y, mh—Bkotion . pictures: orf stereopticon; represcnting ' leading individuals of various dah'y breeds. CROOKSTON CITY TEAM CLEANS UP conrm K (Oonfinued Rrom Page 1) ~—Discussion of pracu- kt;hh wlthr three field: baskets' and ree s For.| nn}ndp. Phibbs and Simons ~each scored two fleld baskets and scoring With oné free throw. Claude Balley of thij ¢ty officiated as referee. - Crookston Weber Samson Haaven Miller Nelson Smith for r Lane. MARKETS POTATO MARKET Chicago, Dec. 22.—Potato market firm. Re{.e‘lpts 7 cars. Total U. shipments 298 cars. Idaho rurals, one car at $1.20; only sale reported. \HENRY WATTERSON DIES AT JACKSONVILLE HOTEL (Continued From Fage 1) In 1886 he merged the Journal, the | T Courier and Demoerat under the Courier-Journal. Then he took up tle banner to. work for a solidified North and South. With brilliant works that struck the heart he managed to draw the applause of the nation. By Uni! Washington, Dee. 22.—News of Henry Watterson’s death cast a pall of sorrow ovér official ‘Washington and the arms conference. President Harding was_ notified of the death early today. Heé is preparing a mes- sage of sympathy for the family. ord was also.sent to former: Presi- dent Wilson." STATE CHAMPIONSIN CLUB WORK ANNOUNCED Vnnons and,.district awards] for boys' an gg extension work in agriculture and home economics were announced this week from the office A, Erickson; Yniversity farm; leader of junior club work in Minne- Edwin Neeb of Winona is the state champion poultry: clab member, In his story of “How I Raised My Pouls ! he says: - “I am very much pleased with this year’s result. My/| financial statement shows-a total val- ue of $190.70 and a total cost of $45.25, leaving a net profit for the year of $145.45.” The state ‘champion of the am‘le “Somebody to See You” IF‘ everybody with something to inferest you should come and ring your bell, what a nuisance it would be! "Think of ‘the swarming, jostling crowd the stamplng of acre corn growing class veme Coon. 4 14-year-old boy of Farlb;\xlt, Rice county. He raised 107 bushels, 66, bushels of which were good for seed corn. - The total value of his corn ‘was $143.44 and his total ‘costs $25.25 —leaving a profit of $118.19, The state winner of the five-acre corn con- test is -Oran Aughenbaugh, aged 18, S. |of New Richland, Waseca county, who had an average yield of 85 bushels to the acre, ' He places the value of éorn per acre at’ $35 and his costs of pro- ductxon at $27.62, leaving him a prof- it of $7.38'an acre. The champion garden clab of the state is the Cyrus club of Cyrus, Pope county.” The estimated value of its products was $561.05 and its, esf mated ‘profit $540.30. - Representa- tives who won trips to the Minnesofa Grop Show were Richard Kron and Eloyd and Leonard LarSon, = Second [ champion honors in the state were awarded to the Mankato Garden club with Clarence Nelson -and. Violet Kaafman as repteg %utives to the X thér winners, by trip to the Twin Cities'were: ‘North- ern, Tony Zalar of Evelehh, North Central, Dorothy _Johngon of Glyn- don; Southern, Willard Weeks of Wi- nona; South' Central Theodore Kel- ler of Sauk Rapids. The best clabs {in-the various districts jand theit rep- resentatives tothe big state crop : Northern, - ‘Greenfield clpb of Itasca county, Harolg Olson; North Central, Mora club, John Erick- son; Southern, Blooming P; Merv:l C. Bray; South €ent {Meadow - club; - Alleen . Mc The state-champion gardéne; flom other winners will be & ater. Hen Is a Producer. A hen owned by a Byron Central, Mich,, man is reported to have broken an. egg-laying record. .She s said to | have 1aid double-; yolked eggs every day for three’ weeks and ‘then: pro- duced an egg that welghed six ounces and measured nine and five-sixtbenths fnches around. the 1ong” way and one- halt inch around the center. It com- \ |4ained two yolks besides belng & per- fectly normal-sized egg. 1eet on your porch and carpets' Every day we know of many callers who come to see They never jangle the bell—they don’t take up you. your whole day trying to get your attention. they do it in a way that is most considérate of your pri- vaey and your convenience. They advertlse in your newspaper In this way you have only to hsten to those you know ethmg that interests you: They . you cah gather quickly just. what ow. You can receive and hear them all. Anfuswn in eomparatwely ferJmn- at a-glanee have make it short, # you W&nt tq In falmess to yourself look over all the advertise- ments. The smallest and the largest—you never can be sure which one will tell something you ‘really want to know, L ewild Brmr Mazurka.. 4| Two songs, ‘Frénch Doll,’ ‘Sailor Dol . Maxiuy 2 “Henther Rose”. HOM MARN TIMES HAVE \ YOLD MOU THEYRE NOY GOOD - | BHOLGH FOR MU B PLAY WiTtH + PUPIIS GWE RF.CITAI. PARIS PLAGUED BY WILD CATS To“emw mm" Really Serious Situation cauud by Hundreds of, the Animals Infesting Mrs: G, Oliver Riggs'ipiano class|; Bois de ‘Boulogne. will give a recital Friday afternoon at|’ 2 Hundreds of wild cats running loose 8 o’clock at the Methadxst church. The in the Bots de Boulogne, Paris, and public is cordially invited to attend, actually proving a menace to peacea- an_excellent program heing assured, | ble pedestrians, miy sound like an ex- which i as follows cess of Mmagination, but it. is really a Duet, “Playing Tag”. Margstein | fact. Moreover, their existence: has Marjorie and Eva Cunnmgham provoked a conflict between the Soci- “Under the Leaves” “Thome ety for the Protection of Animals and * George ['the Bird Lovers’ society, the latter de- “Flowers of the Forest”. ayne: Langdon ‘claring the wild felines must be shot e ‘by police agents, while the former in- sist thiat the police have no right to, pture them by any other means than x traps. The cats, however, refuse enter the boxes, and are so evraged y: the centhnm[ attempts to lure them into’ mets” that they now- show: fight ‘whenever nurses or children apgroach Dnet, “Comin’ Thru the Rye” + Fduring ‘their mornlig strolls.” ‘The Maxine Nelson, Loufsa Lambert / { Sefns prefecture 1s. taking the problem so seriously that a special committee has been appointed to investignte iter | Is prepurl.nz\n report to show. less the cats ‘den be ousted fzom tlie city's blggest plnvgraun\! the ing litters of kittens will be more sav- age than thelr parents and the Bois de Boulogne will become, as dangerous for humans as 'some of the forests in northern Russfa, - Ancient Chinese Fable. In a story in the Saturday Evening Post by Harry Leon. Wilsen, one of his characters relates® the following Chinese fable: “About 1,700 years since, a politician npamed Su Tal was one day advising: the King -of Chao to put an end to his ceaseless hos- tilifles ' agaiast "the Yen State. - “This nmorning,’ said he, “when crossing thes! river T saw a mussel open. its shell & | to_bask In the sun, - At once the blrd Hi X Jack Burgess . “Awny to_ the Woods' - Jane Bo) “The Blue:Birds' Message”.. Pluma Kmd ‘“Rendesvouz” Pear! “Falling Shadows” 3 Eleanor Bowser “Daneé on_the Green”......... Louisa Lambert “Silver Spray” Catherine Gilmore “Fluttermg Lpaves” 23 Helen Burke Ehzubeth Tuomy. nccompnmed Elizabeth “Wind at Play”’ Marjorie “Narcissus” . “Pnrmnnn" “Hungary” . “To’ Spring” And- / eheermg sights. Instead, purchase glfts. e an tlitust In' his bill to éat the mussel, but the latter closed his shell and held the bird {5, fast. ‘If it doesn’t rain today or to- morrow,” said the oyster catcher, ‘there will be_a dead mussel' :And if you do not get out g this by today or to- morrow,’ replied . the musse!. ‘there will be a dead oyster catcher’ Mean- while up came a fisherman and carried oft. both of them.”” Weigh Elemen‘s of Unlverse. Atomic weights of nearly forty of the ' ninety chemlcal elements from which the universe is built have been | determined by Prof, Theadore Rich- "ards and Prof. Gregory P Baxter, ac- cording 1o announcerient by Harvard The figures “ere issued nfler 35 years'of experimentation, and some of the ‘data is being used by thousands of chemists throughout the world, the 5 and out came (he best of coffee with cream and sugar on a pneat metal tray. His luggage was cared for as it would be in the Dest ‘American -hotels. - Instead: of be- furred Russians, there weére - dapper young - ‘men outside the station and charming’ young women inside, each dressed in the immaculate uniform of {the Finnish = waitress.. “One went [ubout," he ‘says, “pibbling here ard ' | there as a child in a dream-nibbles | from @ castle made of chocolate.” Nature 'in a Freakish Mood? A bullfrog with. the ears of a rat has been caught at Packeviile, Conn. Joe Welch, who has caught bullfrogs j.of all colors and sizes, ‘captured it, according ta reports. - Why nature en- | @owed it with two rat ears.he leavu for others to.determine, ‘,, :gnimmmm m 2 i To freeze or fill on a cold day; g ing ‘winber or summer ‘whenev Syou wish_to go—have you 1o e Sthem? Your best buy. HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES BICYCLES AND. SUPPLIES g B = 1] T o o E311 SIXTH ST.. - BEMIDJIE -AlllIlllllllIIIlllllllllIIIlllllll.llllllllllllmfi EFFECTIVE DEC. 26th, 1921 KOORS lgcper g ‘Quart No ehange in the prices of Cream or Milk-in quantities:less than one quart. IKoors Bros. Co —PHONE 175— THE PIONEER WANT ADS _BRING RBSUI.TS ———-——EDITORIAL The Spirit of Chdstmas Chr}stmas is the greatest time of all the year, because it. is the time of good cheer; a-time of peace and good-will be- tween each and everyone. It’s wonder- ful influence keeps alive those finer and hifiher qualities of friendliness and good, fellowsh:p which gre sometimes forgot- ‘ten in the hustle and bustle'of every-day business and earning our daily bread. ithout Christmas, what would the Srear mean to the chil- dren—Christmas is the highlight in their little lives—it brings de- ‘light — answers childish dreams — makes ' millions of children dance with glee every year and makes us all happler to see such This store has that Christmas Spirit in full measure and holi- day shoppers will find it a pleasant cheerful, profitable place to caE . Then, too, your-Christmas gift might be purchaéed on “Lucky Day” R | S "l for cash at Given’s be,_;_\ month to thelr custonier: PHONE 57 _-in which case your money will be refunded.- Hundreds buy Ise they refund a whole day s receipts each leen Hardware Co. « BEMIDJI, MINN.