Old News

International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926

January 3, 1918 · Page 7 of 8

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II I pj pWMfH »r FPT^r TW Tf. Mf* Sik?* .W &J?£... 4f-. ,&V Btra*#A^ONMrFS.Lt^ PRESS "5- ,-0 Page Eight Vhere the Imperial army under The ants "as many strsfiff dgafS aS^They &SSIS1 IS REMARKABLE CITY gleams of good cheer are men To 'use 'S' AUt. OLD fc. :J traitor, De Bourbon, was pressing hard 'J LlCi would take each day.' "Johnson," the tongue in the interests of happiness. CODE OF THE JUk lr upon the retreating French troops, ithough he made a wry face, always accepted—and To'daily drill the tongue as an '4 Shows How Influence of One Man Said to Have Lived to Be 152 Year* Bayard was asked to take the command smoked. He admitted to instrument of happiness is to enter into an With Idea Can Persist Through Organization of Young jBoys in New OI»J—Lived Under Reigns of and save the army. "It is too 'a friend in the consulate that he had the fundamental conception of liv* the Centuries. York Is Given Instruction In Civic Ten Princes. .'•* V. _*• late," he said, "but my soul is God's accepted them because he believed he -..,i tngi—Rev. Newell Dwight Hillls. Duties and Good/ Conduct. and my life is my country's." Then would gain favor with the chief in that "Old Parr" was an Englishman A remarkable city 13 Assist, show­ putting himself at the head of a body way, but that they made him ill. He the city of New The junior p^' whose proper name was Thomas Parr ing how the influence of a man with of men at arms, he held the enemy at was sent^ to a hospital, and there the iW In 6ase of Pneumonia. for boys be York is an an idea /an persist down the and who broke the modern record by changing physiclah said this is, one of the bay until struck ^a11, revelation came. "Johnson" was a and fifteen, tween the living to the ripe old age of one hundred centuries. It is jseven hundred years best aids to a speedy recovery front New York woman who, while in Munich, was" thrown from his horse, but refused drilled and who are reg i, and fifty-two years, &n exchange and more gince Sj^ Francis lived and pneumonia. Make a tight-fitting jacket /orts, civic du« had donned men's clothes to to retire, sayiog be haft 'instructed in says. The British cyclopedia gives died here, and yet today Assisi is little of cheesecloth, sleeveless, and interline jcross the frontier. She returned to under competent never sho^n his back t6 thi enemy./.- .ties and good this account of him: besides the city of St. Francis. His the consulate but once after having with two thicknesses of. sheet cotton. supervision. In the He was placed against a taety fac-' and responsible "Thomas Parr (1483-1635), English name lends it whatever fame and importance Line with the cheesecloth. Fasten recovered from the chief's strong Rood describes its Century Henry centenarian, known as 'Old Parr,' is reputed Ing the advancing hos** the want it may have, and something cigars and then only to resign. Somehow, in front with snaps it is worn next of a cross he-*'~ '. lorigin. "It occurred first to a policq to have been born in 1483 at of his kindly spirit seems to hang A onl without a passport, she got into the skin. It is best to have two of becaus»-flf-- swor.i Icaptain of the, East side—Sweeney of "T- VVinnington, Shropshire, the son of a about it still.' ssed __ the absence of a priest he.. th.ese little coats. They protect the Italy and obtained passage to America the Fifteenth precinct. The commis-. farmer. In 1500 he is saicl to have left Assisi is a bare little Italian^1' confessed to his maitre d'hotel. When patient from any chance draft wheq on a steamer sailing from Genoa.— several civilians got ton sioner his home and entered domestic service town, built of dull stone, y&jsS***" De Bourbon came up and expressed. changing the clothes or bedding. ^enev, ««(i the idea Milwaukee Journal, winding rocky strep*" narrow, geth7 and in 1518 to have returned to regret at seeing him in such condition, nnp of lG°klng out over day the junior 'force'' VVinnington to occupy the small holding one iWor he said: "Weep for yourseif, sir. For f: xairest prospects in all i, with inspectors and [is he wjii death Short Skirts and Jewelry. oi me, I have nothing to complain of I Here St. Francis was born of 6igar Lighten* in Italy. aer young officers, and leapt, For the jeweler, one prospect of his father. In iuoo, at the age of eighty, die in the course of my duty to my The Italian substitute for the nea* «'-fi parents, here he led an idle, .inbersliip that will reach ja grow. prosperity relieves the gloom of soaring he married his first wife, by whom country. You triumph in betraying spendthrift youth, and here he was and convenient cigar lighter^otirfiT'in 5,000 and over this spring. Uniforms prices, scarcity of material, delay lie had a son and a daughter, both of yours but your successes are horrible suddenly seized with the idea of universal every American cl£«r-^fore is a long are permitted, but are not insisted on In shipments rind all the ills that beset wVm died in infancy. At the age of and the end will be sad." Having brotherhood and the necessity rope lighted and placed outside of the every junior, however, is entitled to the war-harried lapidary. In brief, if one hundred and twenty-two, his first uttered these words the gallant knigh£ for poverty. Here he founded the tobacco shop. It is made of cheap iwear a special badge, which is never skirts will stay short, it may make up wiie having died, he married died and was buried by his enemy on again. Franciscan order, praying that its distinctive herhp, of rope waste, and even of rags wora on the outside of coat or jacket. for the shortage in precious stones. His vigor seems to have been uniiir the field with military honors. sign might be "never to possess twisted roughly into shape and held ,excepting at drills other gatherings. or "The shorter the skirt the better for one paired, and when hundred and anything under the sun and to together by strings of twine. The improvised police include the ities of the junior us," said a jeweler recently. And why? Where a Regiment Is Buried. thirty years old he is said to have have no means of living save by begging." lighter is made by the storekeeper clean decent language at of and "Because," replied the jeweler, "the In one of the battles before Plevna thia.slied corn. In 1G35 his famcreoched himself. Popular Science all places. code conthus: nes, in The sale of ankle watches has been increased the Russian infantry regiment "Pensa" of the ears Thomas Howard, Monthly. He carried out his rule in strictest from to 75 per cent since 50 lost 1,700 men and every officer of earl Arundel, who resolved to er'i) practice, living in a hut of reeds bui!t over 'hitch' on wagons or street skirts went up." But this is not all. out of a total of 2,000 during an attack bit hi in at court, and had him conveyed where now stands the church of Sr. always cross the streets at the There is another article of jewelry affected that only lasted 20 minutes. An obe^ to London in a specially, con Books. All Should Keep Mary of the Angels. He felt a great corners do not build bonfires in the by brief dress. It is known as lisk erected on the scene of action structed litter. Here he was presented Probably the most expensive error love for all things created, so that he streets do not break windows or street the vanity band. It is apt to include a bears the inscription. "Sacred to the 'o King diaries I, but the change oi usually by our farmers is the made hailed the sun as liis brother and lamps, or deface buildings or sidewalks purse, a powder box, a mirror and perhaps memory of the Regiment 'Pensa,' air and diet soon affected him and the failure to keep books that will enable preached to the fishes. All of these incidents with chalk a cigarette case and a match safe. do not smoke cigarettes or which lies buried here." old ixiun died at Lord Arundel's fc.Qji.se at any time, to tell whether they them, in his career and many others It is worn—well, where the boys with play 'craps' see that garbage cans are in London on "the 14th of November, are doing business at a profit or loss. are set forth in nobie frescoes by kept covered, that garbage and ashes long stockings wear their garters. 1635. He was buried in the soucli Many of our farmers can't tell at the Giotto in the Franciscan church at "Many of them worn?" "If the skirts and waste paper are not mixed in Jeremiah in the Pillory. of transept Westminster abbey, where end of the year whether they have Assisi. get a little shorter," said the jeweler, The Jeremiah was confined cans that cans are promptly removed prophet the inscription over his grave reads: made money or lost money. Should In Assisi, too, is the tomb of St. "you will be surprised to see how many in (Jeremiah 29:26), which from the sidewalk after being emptied: the pillory of ye "Tho. Parr, county of Salt.pp. any other business be conducted in this Francis, in a little chapel of the- Franciscan appears to have been a common mode that persons are requested to keep sidewalks of them we'll sell."—New York Times. He ye Born in anno 3483. lived in manner, nothing but failure would be monastery. The tomb is surrounded punishment in his time. Ancient and areaways in front of their of viz: reigns of ten princes, King Tikiward expected.—Exchange. by beautiful marbles and rich prisons contained a special buildings clean, and that they do not Hebrew Complaint of the Stupid. 5, 4, King Edward King I'i chard work in beaten bronze. The world chamber for the pillory. This wafl throw refuse in the street." It is only stupid people who complain 8, King Henry 7, King Henry 8, King has loved St. Francis, but apparently termed "the house of the pillory."— that they are misunderstood. If they Edward 6, Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth. it has never understood him. Else II Chronicle 16:10. CIGARS PROVED HER UNDOING were not stupid, they would know that The No-Breakfast P!?a. King James and King diaries, it would not in ail reverence have there is absolutely no such thing as [!Le breaki'ast-eatiug u»it often crsan 152 here aged years, and was buried surrounded his vault with the rich being understood, and, therefore that abnormal stomachic condition, 5, 1G35-'" Woman Employee of American Consulate November Rubber Plants. luxury of beauty against which his there is nothing whatsoever to be tvy.* Physical Culture Magazine. If Passed as Man Until Chief's of who Thai the son a small farmer To keep rubber plants in fine condi* whole life and all his teachings were gained by complaining about it. jne is in perfect health, and arises (the "Smokes" Made Her III. bad started in life as a hired man tlon, once a week wipe each leaf separately but one great protest. 6 Wise people who want to be understood villi a keen appetite for breakfast, British cyclopedia says he left home with a cloth dipped in sweel do not spend their time complaining, here wiJi be no occasion for omitting A young American, who said he was and entered domestic service), should oil. Then pour a tablespoonful down but in perfecting some means of lie'meal. There ara, however, but fif»v a student in Munich caught by the have been buried in Westminster abbey, among the roots. This adds strength expressing themselves by which they a perfect health, and the omission of his DEATH OF CHEVALIER BAYARD war without funds, appeared in an shows that the story of great to each leaf and life to the plant. may reveal t: the world about them hr nV-?ast gives the sioiuach a chance American consulate in Berne and •«£e was believed. some slight remnant, at least, of their iffr adjust itself. It has an onttortimity asked for any kind of work that Ga'lant French Knight Met End Hero, *C ... souls, or their minds, or their ideas, or "'to develop a keen appetite for the particr^ar Nation's Drug Bill. would enable him to save money to Drilling the fatigue* icaily While Leading Fight tiieir discoveries, or their eccentricities, character of nourishment most get home. Five hundred million dollars is said Upon all those wiio u-e ambitfiiUS Against Traitor's Army. or whatever it is tliey want to .eedeci by ilte body yt that time. The to be the yearly expenditures for drugs He was hired and proved capable, to make the world iiar-fier and better ir.p.fce Known. .- '-breaki'ii ^t pi an is a splendid means in the United States. Since 1880 the energetic and honest. He was known •f rests the obligation of drilling the It was on April 30, 1524, that thfo Ivjn you complain a!out not being properly adjusting one's appetite, expenditure per capita for patent remedies as "Johnson." The consul, a genial, tongue into habits of kindness, purity Chevalier Bayard was killed in battle. understood, the only thing you mnke oih as to quantity and character of consumed in the United Statef generous ir.an, was in the habit :f and refinement Not by spasmodic eftoi His end was characteristic. Engaged is that you are a coinpIai i2i\— has risen from 33 cents to $1.54. handing out to hi* clerks and assist- 's nor witi) occasional. hints and in a camp:ii-in in northern Italy, 1 Our folN CHRISTMAS BANKING lit can start now Costs Nothing to Join— our Christmas Banking Club and it is an easy way to have money next Christmas. The plan is simple! You start with 10c, 5c, 2c or lc and increase with the same amount each week. Or you can deposit 50c, $1, $5 or more each week and deposit the same amount each week. How to Join Look at the different clubs in table below and select the one you wish to join-the lc, 2c, 5c, 10c, 50c, $1, $5- then come to our with the first weekly payment. We will make bank you a member of the club and give you a Christmas Banking Club Book showing the Club you have joined. WHAT THE DIFFERENT CLUBS WILL PAY YOU Club 5e Club 10c 50c Club $1.00 Club $5.00 Club Club Club 4, PAYMENTS PAYMENTS PAYMENTS PAYMENTS PAYMENTS PAYMENTS PAYMENTS 1st Week... .50c 1st Week $1.00 1st Week $5.00 FOR 1st Week .10c 1st Week. .. 1st Week ..2c 1st Week .. ,5c .. .lc $2, |3, $4 2nd Week........50c 2nd Week $1.00 2nd Week... 20c 2nd Week $5.00 2nd W^ek. 4c 2nd Week 10c 2nd Week 3rd Week $1.00 3rd Week........50c 3rd Week $5.00 3rd Week. 15c 3rd Week 30c $10.00 3rd Week 3rd Week. 6c .. .3c Deposit 50c Every Week Deposit $1 Every Week Increase 10c Every Week Deposit $5 Every Week Increase le Every W*ek iM'feaKo 2c Every Week Increase 5c Every Week Total in 50 Weeks Total in 50 Weeks Total in 50 Weeks Total in 50 Weeks Total In 50 YYe#l*s Totsil in 50 'Weeks Total in 50 Weeks or $25.50 $25.00 $50.00 $250.00 $127.50 I $12.75 $63.75 any amount YOy CAN BEGIN WITH THE LARGEST PAYMENT FIRST AND DECREASE YOUR PAYMENTS EACH WEEK The Reasons, for the Pam 't Club niJ Vmintf 8ens*ble thing for all parents to do is to join our —_—— —_—— -fi Christmas Banking Club and also put every member of their family into it. This will teach them the value of money and how to bank and way moderate and To provide a for those of even small means to bank, their money. ,r HAVE MONEY. Maybe this little start you give them now may some day set them up in To teach "the Banking habit" to those who have never learned it. tfb* taught business or buy them a home. How often have you wished that your parents had It makes your pennies, nickels and dimes, often foolishly spent grow into dollars dollars you early the value of banking your money. You would be well-off today. Don't grow into a fortune.. .Start your fortune today. the same mistake with YOUR children. "Pit! To give you a Bank connection and show you how our Bank can be of service to you. Sf4 -i 'i/'',r* -f1* f: