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«AGE SDK
A
MAN PICKS
mestics, while
all
A WIFE
Cv Conclusions That Have Been
Auhr-d by the Registrar at tho
Boston City Hal'.
Krtuard \V. McGlennen, registrar at
ttte Boston city hall since 1900, who
Biceps record of that city's marriages,
Sas found in his study of the subject
«f selection that association deter
mines a man's course in the selection
of his wife, and when you have chosen
your vocation you have automatically
chosen your lifeinate at the same time,
observes the New York Herald. Mr.
McGlennen lias found that tailors mar
ry tailoresses, longshoremen choose
waitresses, many employees and clerks
Knarry stenographers, while profession
al men more often pick their wives
from the girls in society in which they
anove.
After eighteen years of daily obser
vation of the way and habits of pro
spective hoinemakers, Mr. McGlennen
Ma come to the conclusion that prox
imity is the chief determining factor
In a man's choice of a wife.
In-the long and voluminous marriage
records the various averages of tho
different vocations siiow that chauf
feurs and cooks are attracted by- do
tailors, dressmakers and
snilliners incline toward still closer re
lationship. Salvation Army men choose
a Salvation Army lassie, the sea Cfip
ftiia picks a good housekeeper and
Some
hotly.
while seamen generally
Jul! in love, when ashore, witii wait
resses who serve their meals. Mr. Mc
Glennen believes that good looks and
food clothes are not such an impor
tant factor as generally believed—it
5s
a matter of environment. The
telephone operator is a favorite with
She soldier, also the nurse who min
isters to him when wounded. lAinch
iooui proprietors more often marry
their cashiers, and so it goes on.
What puzzles Mr. McGlennen, how
ever, is why a mariner chose a dent
ist's assistant as life mate and how
a street car conductor came to pick
out an actress for his wife. These are
axceptions to the general rule.
Lied in Attempt to Save Pet.
Determined efforts by ladies of high
aortal position to smuggle pet dogs
without license into Enghind were re
cently described to a representative at
the diseases of animals' branch of the
board of agriculture, London. It takes
the combined intelligence of Scotland
Yard and the customs officials to out-'
maneuver some dog lovers. Recently,'
on hoard a steamer crossing to En?-'
'and. a foreign princess was seated on]
a
ue--k
stool and a wind was blowing.
A shrewd observer, whose duty it wa
V- inquisitive with his eyes, hap
pened to catch sight for a moment of
a little dog's wagging ta'I. On'land
as the lady, in reply to the usual
question, said she had nothing to de
'. ture. "'No dog, madanie?" "Certain
ly not."' "Then," said her questioner
"I must send for the female searchei
to have your statement verified." "In
that ease," said the lady, "if you will
allow me a couple of minutes by my-1
self I'll produce my little dog." Whic'i)
abe did.
The
old-fashioned Republican who
used to hate a "Dimocrat" now has
in his place the fellows in Congress
Tho hob-noii- with the President and
iTy to harmonize things for the Dem
ocrats. wlien the Democrats fail at it.
4*
TRY THE LEADER FOR JOB WORK
»J» 4* *iM5* *5* *5* *5*
Let The Leader Job Dept.
Print It for Vou
-ar
wMir?
"3
HOLLAND LAND OF PRIMNESS
American Visitor Attracted by Neat
Appearance and General Cleanli
ness Everywhere Noticeable.
Holland and the Hollanders are as
unlike France as two countries can
be, Corp. David Rantseur writes In the
Indiapapelis Star. Tile rural districts
of Holla id look like one big formal
garden ind the cities of Holland look
•is if they bad been cast in a huge
mold, set down carefully and scoured
and polished every day. Hut France
looks more like a country expressly
designed to please the eye, and the
cities of France, more helter-ske'ter,
reflect the temperamental spirit of the
French.
A smalJ city in Fiance neglects
whole streets anc, districts in order
that one spot, ore park, cathedral or
building, may '.To beautiful. Hut in
Holland the idea seems to be to make
It all substantial and neat and that
Is why wherever one goes in Rotter
dam or The Hague he linds the same
orderly rows upon rows of apartment
Ileuses or business blocks with the
same little staid parkways and parks
that somehow remind one of the old
fashioned "best rooms" of a genera
tion ago.
I have covered Rotterdam and The
Hague, and in neither city have I
.''i.und a district that corresponds to
our tenement districts or that was
characterized by the squalor or dirt
of the poon sections of our Ameri
can cities. I found districts where
poor people lived and where the houses
were not so good, but even those poor
ei people looked clean and their houses
were clean, the streets and alleys
clean, .just as in the l-.ett.er districts.
In Holland it is the men who wear
the best clothes if is the men vho are
the better looking the best shops are
for men. the tobacco shops of Rotter
dam are gorgeous, there is no other
word, they rival in splendor even iiie
jewelry shops of Fifth avenue. New
York. The shops for men's wear are
much more attractive than those for
women's wear and everything there
seems to be of men and for men.
In Rotterdam one would not, as he
would in a French town, drop into a
cafe or store and start jollying the
inaduine or mademoiselle and playing
with the youngsters. I rather think
that if we did that over there the
stolid Dutch frau would call for help
and one of the solemn-looking police
men who stalk about 1 lie street would
escort us to the local jail. Those
things aren't done in Rotterdam.
How Fast Shot Travels.
When standing within a few yards
of a gun's muzzle at the time of dis
charge, a person would be amazingly
astonished were he only able to see
the shot go whizzing IJV. Experiments
In instantaneous photography prove
that the shot not only spread out,
cometlike, as they tt.v, but they string
out. one behind another at a much
greater distance than they spread.
Thus, with a cylinder gijn, when the
shot of a charge reaches a target that
is 40 yards away, the last shot is lag
ging full ten yards behind. Even a
chokebore gun s^.ot will lag behind
eight yards in 40. This accounts for
the wide swath that is mowed in a
flock of ducks on which a charge of
shot falls just right. About 5 per cent
only of the shot, according to the most
reliable deductions from experiments,
arrive simultaneously at the target
aimed at. the others lagging In the
ratio named above.
LINOTYP
m&r?—"ts*
Leader Printing Means Quality
Letterheads, Envelopes, Statements,
Business Cards, Calling Cards, Wed
ding Stationery, Legal Blanks, Skle
Bills, Posters, Blotters or anything
else you would like in the printing line.
Our Job Work Speaks for Itself
f1
It
The girls in tlie home come from
every walk of life. Willful girls of
wealthy parents as well as those girls
who are suffering from ignorance or
from poor home conditions come in
response to the need which tfrey feel.
"We need no movies or drama of any
kind to present tragedies to us-," said
Adjutant Bertha Smith, head of the
institution. "We have them before as
every day in the year. If you could
hear the sad stories of desertion, de-
THE WASHBURN LEADER, WASHBURN. NORTH DAKOTA
WELCOME GIVEN
TO NEEDY GIRLS
Salvation Army Rescue Home
and Maternity Hospital Is
Doing Great Work.
TINY TOTS CARED FOR
ceive as Loving and Healthy Start
in Life as Though Born Under
Normal Conditions.'
Salvation Army Home Service. The
motto is: "One May Be Down, But
Never Out." A girl is never allowed
to feel that she has entirely ruined
her life by a mistake. She is taught,
by the influence of the lives of the
Salvationists who are constantly with
8PCnds the day in
tive effort, in sewing, laundry, or in
any kind of work necessary to keep
up such an institution and which will
help her to get a position after she
leaves.
About 50 per cent of the girls wfro
are in tlie home come from the city
and the other half from the country..
The majority are from Minnesota, but
there are a few from Wisconsin and
many from the Dakotas. Many cases
are brought from the city hospitals,,
some girls are sent by parents or
friends, but most of them come in- re
sponse to the help which they know
they will find there. At present there
are fifty-two girls and forty-seven bab
ies in the- home. The average age- ©f!
the girls is sixteen and there are girls
from fourteen to twenty. From the
time that the girl comes to the home
until she leaves, her identity is de
stroyed and she is known to the other
girls as Lulu, Betty, or Selma, bnt
never by her last name. Her last
name is scratched off her mail in the
office and she is protected in every
way from the criticism of the world.
The home keeps close track of the
girls after they leave. They now have
a mailing list of ItiO girls and every
month they send out copies of a pub
lication. "The Lifeline" which tells
of tho doings of the home. The first
Sunday of the month is "Out of Lovev
Sunday, on which all the girls: who
can, come back and bring their-chil
dren. The home always seems "home"
to all who have ever been there. When
the girls are out of work they return
to the home rathor than go to places
which would present temptations. The
mor.:.l influence which is established
wheel the girl is in the home follows
and guides her everywhere.
The present building for the .Jjome
was erected about five years ago, and
is already outgrown. It has accom
modations for" seventy-five girls »and
babies and contains all modern hos
pital and home conveniences. Plans
for a new building are in the hands
of an architect. The structure will be
placed on the same ground with the
present one and will cost about ?110,
000 without the furnishings. It will
be essentially a hospital with room
for sixty girls and sixty babies,-While
the old building will be turned into
the administration and dormitory
building. The new building will de
pend on the money raised from the'
funds raised in the present campaign
for home service. Inasmuch as girls
from the Dakotas and Wisconsin as
well as from this state are cared, for,
it is honed that the Rescue Home
*•*••11 rocRive a ,proportion of the fund
alloted to each of those state*.
V
V*''v' viy'1
Children of Unmarried Mothers Re- Will Enable Salvation Army to Do
Tiny bits of humanity, children of
unmarried mothers, ordinarily cast out
by the world at large, are given as lov
ing and as healthy a start in life as
babies born under normal conditions
because the Salvation Army provides
an especial heme in which they are
caret! for. The Salvationists in Minne
apolis and St. Paul support the Res
cue Home and Maternity Hospital
which is located in St. Paul and which
welcomes needy girls from all over
.Minnesota, North and South Dakota.
This home Is one of the twenty-six
similar homes which the army has the most sinning of this great coun
established throughout the United try of jours, and appeal to you to come
btates io care for the 60.000 girls who to our help. No more helpful expres
go astray every year.
ceit, which we hear, your heart would food in the garbage cans they who are
warm up towards the girl-mother. We i forced to sin through want, and driv
teach her clean living, domestic work,
sewing and above all, we bring her in
touch with God, who will be her guide
and friend through life."
1
WHY THE MONEY
SHOULD BE GIVEN
Commander Booth Makes Appeal
to PeDple to Raise $15,000,000
fcr Home Service.
GIVES AMPLE REASONS
.Greater Work of Relief, Comfort
and Salvation for the Poor, the
Sorrowing and the Sinning.
Conmmander Evangeline Booth,
head of the Salvation Army organiza
tion in this country, has made an ap
peal to the people to help raise the
?!5.000,000 set as a quota in the na
tional campaign for Home Service
funds. She tells why the money
should be raised and what the funds
raised will be used for. In her appeal,
she says:
"Au the commander-in-chief of the
Salvation Army forces in this'cotintry,
1 stand here today in the name of
tht1 most poor, the most sorrowing,
sion of your
The Salvationists in the home are ices in the war can be given us tl*w
known as helpers to the needy. They the splendid and substantial offering
work with the motto which is being
0f
quotcd in the present campaign used ice Fund which will relieve us of the
nationally for the raising of funds for almost intolerable burden of street
her, that life still holds something for reformatories, where by our logical
her and that she still has her place methods, our hope human and Divine,
to fill and her redemption to work our faith in the sacrifice of the Son of
out. She is never permitted to feel God, we have seen hearts of stone
discouraged or to become embittered, i turned to flesh, the most neglected and
She leads a regular, systematized life. I degraded, elevated and made white,
I1 rom the time she gets up in the the brutal and course made kind and
morning until her regular bedtime at gentle.
"ight,JhH.
appreciation of our serv-
the $15,000,000 for our Home Serv-
corner collecting and which will pro
vide the funds to do a still greater
work of relief, comfort, and salvation.
"Freed from our awful financial
burdens, we can increase our merciful
errands down the shadowed corridors
0f
the great prisons, penitentiaries and
con^ruc- appea, for your help
'to
aid. us in
rendering that assistance to the cities
in providing attractive clubs for the
worlcingman to take the place of the
saloon. The Salvation Army says the
poor shall have somewhere to go
where there is light, warmth, music,
companionship, and every imaginable
concoction of soft drink that lemon,
orange, ginger and soda can put to
gether. I stand here today and appeal
to you in the name of the destitute—
they that shiver in the cold' and
swelter in the heat they that go hun
gry and unclothed they jvho live in
dim, stifling lodging houses they who'
sit in ill-lit cellars and sleep in de
serted stable-yards they who look for
en to death through sin ,they whose
whole existence is one hard struggle
just to keep alive—I ask your help for
these, the poor and the destitute.
"America has been kind enough to
call our women of the war heroines—
and they are worthy of the name
but the great heroines of the Salvation
Army, the martyrs of the Salvation
Army, are the women at our. Slum S'et-
tlements, onr Rescue Homes, and' our
hospitals. They scarcely, know a
night's sleep unbroken! They work
eighteen hours a day. They soothe
the pains of the sick They- minister
to the dying. They are often the only
mourners at the pauper's grave They
are in the haunts of vice. They are
deep in the filth, squalor, and disease,
rescuing, ever rescuing human souls,
and healing broken hearts when we
are sleeping. Above all I champion
the "cause of little helpless children.
We gather in the children from the1
blast—children of all kinds and na
tionalities, the children of widows who
cannot go to work because of the bab
ies, the children whom policemen pick
up and do not know what to do with,
children of bedridden mothers whose
fathers are in jail, children abandoned
in vacant lots, or found on doorsteps,
children who swelter and die on the
slum pavements in the broiling sum
mer sun and who freeze under the
scanty covering of a piece of sacking
when the weather is zero. We have
our homes in the country, and on the
sea shore where the waves come up
and wash over the little feet. Yet, the
cruelty of it—we are held back for the
want of money.
"It is hard to credit that from the
early Salvation Army woman who car
ried a bed on her back through the
streets to a blind alley where a moth
er lay dying ,on rags, there came all
our social operations which are now
to be found for the helping and shel
tering of the poor outcast, the down
trodden and the unfortunate all over
the world our industrial homes for
unemployed men's hotels for the
homeless labor bureaus.for the work
less emergency and rescue homes for
the unfortunate nurseries, retreats
and orphanages for neglected child
hood emergency relief Repots which
supply clothes and food and fuel for
the clothless, the starving and cold
hospitals for mothers and children,
ft ee dispensaries for the poor. But it
is so. We have gone far though we
had no money but trials and discour
agements. Above all else we hear the
call of duty and must devote onr selves
to our cause—th« service of human
's Uy."
NO
Standard
1833
''FRIDAY. 3BPTBMBEK 19,1918
Do Yon
Remember
Gasless Sundays?
better way could be
found to illustrate and
emphasize the usefulness of
the Standard Oil Company
(Indiana), and the broad
and varied service it renders,
than to take five minutes
and imagine a gasiess year.
Think how our lives instead of being full
and complete through association ^ith
our fellow men would be circumscribed by
the barriers set up by shank's mare.
Think how manufacturing would be ham
pered. How industry generally would
be crippled. How crops would go to
waste through inability to harvest, and
the leaps and bounds that the cost of liv
ing would take.
Instead of the natural expansion of busi
ness that comes from service and useful
ness, the whole structure of business
would be hampered through sheer inabil
ity to render to society that service which
society has been' accustomed to demand.
The Standard Oi! Company (Indiana) is
a public servant owned by 4849 stock
holders, no one of whom -holds as much
as 10 percent of the stock.
The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is
doing a- big job in a big way and has
grown great simply by reaping the re
wards that come from rendering the serv
ice demanded by business and society in
a manner satisfactory and beneficial to
the world at large.
Oil
Ex-Crown prlntess to Visit Husband
The Havre, Sept. 8.—For the first
time since he tied to Holland, the foi"
mer German crown prince expects
shortly to see his wife, who, accom
panied by their two eldest sons is re
ported to have arrived at Oldenzaal,
on her way to Wierengen. The form
er Crown Princess Cecelie also will
visit Amerongen, as the former em
press is anxious to see her grand chil
dren. The. former emperor and em
press had their first promenade in th.3
woods near Amerongen last week.
Bince December.
What? we call out-of-sorts in once
a-1-week practices soon brings one
WJtota we-' cslt groach seven days
week.
Company
(Indiana)
910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago
Many beautiful locations for private residences, or good busi
ness lots, for sale in Washburn.
This is a pleasant place Tor retired farmers to make their
home.. Good water, light and good schools.
Whisky Term.
The mixture called 100 per cent
proof is less than 50 per cent of spir
its. The volume of watur is about
57.16. The origin of the term "proof
spirit" is interesting. Formerly it was
customary to test the strength of spSi^
its by pouring a sample on gunpowder.
If, when a light was applied, the al
cohol burned away and left the pow
»1er so damp that it could not be set
on fire the spirit was declared to be
nnder-proof. A sample just strong
enough to ignite the powder was called
proof.
Henry Ford says that history Is
bunk, and well Call
If interested, see—
John Satterlund, Washburn
Automobile Tourists
When in Minneapolis Stop
Hotel Lincoln
NICOLLET AVENUE at NINTH STREET
Opened Sept. 1st, 1918
Especially convenient for auto parties as Nicollett Avenue
is the leading road from ail points, and has no car tracks.
With two squares of five large garages. Adjoining cities'
largest stores
Rooms at $1 per day. With private toilet 25c extra with
private bath 50c extra. In addition there are suites of
rooms with ,separate toilet, each room having connecting
bath—an ideal arrangement and only found here.
CAFE IN CONNECTION
HOTEL LINCOLN guarantees an atmosphere
of home relinement.
W. B. CAMFIEL.D Proprietors F.S. GREGORY
For past ten years with Minneapolis leading hotels
K
r.
.A-
a lot of boys
about examination, titne in school to
bear, him out.
Town and Acre Lots For Sale
at