Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 21, 1919, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ———PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON BXCEPT SUNDAY- THE BEMIDJX PIONBEER PUBLISHING CO. H. M. STANTON G. E. CARSON E. H. DENU Editor p Manager TELEPHONE 922 Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn, as second-class matter under act of Congress of March 3, 1879, No attention paid to annonymous contributions. Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue., S+ G i SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER BY MAIL One year .. Six months .. Three months .... .$4.00 terssseriaeess 200 ceeseress 100 One week ... THE WEEKLY PIONEER Ten pages, containing & summary of the news of the week. Published every !‘hmd-’y and sent postage paid to any address, for, in advance, $1.50 OPFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY FROCEBEDINGS W THEY HAVE NO COUNTRY. In Beltrami and several other counties of this judicial dist- rict applicants for citizenship have met with disappointment because they have not, in the minds of the presiding jurists, taken sufficient interest in the affairs of the United States to en- title them to the wonderful privilege of naturalization. These men, natives of foreign countries, have forever debar- red themselves from becoming Americans. They had applied for citizenship and were on the probation required by a just law. ' Meantime came the call to service, the call to bear arms in defense of the country in its hour of peril and then these men shrank back under the cover of their foreign birth. Rather than do their duty in the army and navy of the United States they hid beneath the shelter of the alien. Now they are brand- ed as unfit for the title of American citizen. Never can they call themselves Americans. Fugitives in their own land and unwelcome in this, they go out among the hapless men without a country. It will be pitiful if these lessons do not bring the proper ap- preciation of the boon of Americanism. It was our own fault if American citizenship had been held too cleaply. The light estimation in which admission to the band of freemen was held by immigrants was reflected from our own lightly held " citizenship. We lacked appreciation ourselves and we com- municated the lack to the outsider. Now our changed and ex- alted view is impressed upon them. Our new sense of respon- sibility with privilege becomes their sense—or they are cast into the outer darkness of disbarment. * Hereafter there will be a new and enlarged meaning to the term American citizen. —_0 ' The appropriation of $60,000 for gathering and compiling material for use in publishing a complete record of Minnesota’s part in the war has been recommended for passage. To do the work well the commission must have the full amount. The plan is to publish the work in ten volumes. All available ma- terial is to be gathered and complete records of every part of the state made. Every Minnesota soldier, sailor and marine who took any part in the war, no matter how small, will be dealt with. Three volumes of the records are to be filled with the service records of the men. Some space also is to be given to civilian war workers. o «“Billie” Noonan, whose interesting letters concerning leg- islative action are eagerly awaited each week by readers of The Pioneer, is developing into a prognosticator of the first class. Early in the week Noonan predicted that by Thursday the appropriations committée would have recommended an expen- diture of $100,000 for the building of a dormitory for the Be- midji Normal school and late yesterday afternoon his ‘“‘dope” proved correct. This is but one of the several instances where “Rillie” has correctly guessed the outcome of important legis- lation. el s o This is the first day of spring and it should bring to the minds of every loyal citizen the importance of cleaning-up,‘ straightening-up and painting up. We must have a clean,; healthy city or we cannot have a happy contented people. We; must not be content with the knowledge that we have the, most beautiful city in Minnesota. We must also cause it to be known as the cleanest and brightest. RNl S ey Minnesota’s junior senator, Frank B. Kelligg, is being open- ly discuszed in the east as a presidential possibility. This may tend to damper the boom of Governor Burnquist for vice Presi- dent, and might lead to complications in the selection of a favorite son for Minnesota, recognition which must be provided if either is to branch out into national polities. ’ —0 I’rufi: secured from gambling are subject to the income tax, but of course this is not to be taken as endorsement of this| particular source of income. The bureau of internal revenue has a keen scent for money, but it is not endowed with the power to distinguish between tainted and pure. e Because he attacked the: proposed League of Nations, James A. Reed, United States Senator from Missouri, has been called upon by fifty members of the house of representatives of his own state to resign. e O An immediate appropriation of $10,000,000 is needed by the University of Minnesota if its great work is to go on without interruption. For buildings alone, $5,500,000 would cover only imperative needs. % True Fruit, Peach Melba, Brick lce Gream oo FOOS TWALITY Foms®™ YYV¥Y M‘M ALY FONS TRALTTY FORY' Ve VY i ¢ AT THE THEATERS GRAND TONIGHT. The excellence of the story as a literary production the beauty of the photoplay and the fame of Marguerite Clark, make “Tho Goose Girl” as a picture, a remarkable one from every standpoint. “The Goose Girl” will be shown in the Grand theatre to- night, this being a return engage- ment for the -popular photoplay. Universal Current Events and Bray’s Screen Magazine are also on tonight’s program at the Grand. GRAND TOMORROW. That popular actor Tom Moore, a a prime favorite 'in Bemidji, will appear in his latest Goldwyn comedy-drama, “A Man and His Money,” at the Grand theatre to- morrow and Sunday. An added at- traction at the Grand Saturday and Sunday will be the inimitable “Smil- ing Bill” Parsons in his latest refined comedy “The Master of Music.” ELKO TONIGHT. Things don’t go the way you'd ex- pect them to in *“The Rough Neck.” the new World picture starring Mon- tagu Love which will be shown at the Elko theatre tonight. Miss Bar- bara Castleton appears in the role of Frances Armitage, a role in which she is seen to splendid advantage. Frank Mayo has an important role in the cast. : From the time Montagu Love - is first seen in this picture in the role ceeds his fdather as the political bosgs of a big city and cleans out the graft- ers, he grips and holds th,e attention. Mr. Love has not had a Inore atten- tion-catching part than this in a long time, ELKO TOQMORROW, Dorothy Gish in Paramount”pic~ ture ‘“Battling Jane,” a Paramount- Mack Sennett comedy, ‘‘Hide -and Seek, Dectectives” featuring Ben Turpin and other favorites, also music by Mr. Mauritz and Miss Riley are attractions at the Elko theatre for Saturday and Sunday. ° LAST TIME TONIGHT. Seeing ‘“Intolerance” at the Rex tonight is like living four lives in one. This thrilling drama tears the veil from the past and unleashes the imagination to run rampant down the ages in the most romantic periods of history. - To tell of all the wonders of what has been called “‘the greatest show in the world” is an impossibil- ity in a limited amount of space. In place of one love story “Intoler- ance” has three—in place of one set of characters, this fourfold drama of daring surprises has four. The prin- cipal players of the largest cast ever assembled for a stage production numbers among other screen celebri- ties Mae Marsh, Lillian Gish, Miriam Cooper, Constance Talmadge, Bessie Love, Seena Owen, Margery Wilson, Robert Harron, Alfred Paget, Elmer Clifton, Tully Marshall and Walter Long. . SHE WAS LITTLE EVA. From practically every part of the world inquiries come pouring into the offices of the Pathe Exchange Inec., as to the manner in which Pearl ‘White, the famous star of “The Lightning Raider” to be shown at the Rex Saturday secured her start. This is the truth about Pearl. She was born in a little town in Missouri and first appeared on the speaking stage as Little Eva in “Uncle Tom'’s Cabin” that famous classic which has started s0 many of our big stars on the road to success. She trouped with road companies for several years and finally found herself playing ingenues in a small stock company in Stam- ford, Conn. This forcing of the drama upon rural New Englanders while the white lights—the goal of all Thespians—glittered only 30 THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER of boss of a lumber camp until he'gue-: i terward he may expect you to sink 'l‘hrougfi the § Looking Glass % g By EVELYN NESBIT When a man offers you the world with a fence around it, there may be a string tied to it. Watch, out for the string. 1t is foolish fer a young girl to marry a man for the things he promises to give her after the knot is tied. So easy is the business of making promises that all young swalns are prone to paint the fu- ture in brilliant colors. And the young girl nibbles and bites. Then { she regrets it— SRR when it is too late. Don’t marry in the hope that you may ride in a golden automobile, or; that you may have ice cream for des- sert every day. Those are not the things that count. Don't marry for| the snke of living in a hubby-to-be’s fine fi tory house, or for the sake of becoming part owner in his pros- sperous business. Watch out for the | string. Hubby-to-be may «ffer you his fine “house as a home belore ycu are mar- ried, but afterward he may expect you to run it for him as a boarding house. 1lubby-to-he may offer you be- fore you are married a partnership in his fine, prosperous business, but af- your precious savings into it and lose them all. Watch gut for the string when you marry a man for the material good “you may expect to get out of thé match. If you have your eyes open | beforehand you may learn that mar- riage founded on dollars and cents is a delusion and a snare. -The woman | who marries for the sake of having | | the world with a fence around it gen« | eraily loses in the end. Lake With No Outlet. Lake Chad, in the heart of East Af- rica, has no known outlet for the many rivers pouring Into it. Its wa- ters rise and fall with great rapidity. The Alexander expeditiop records that frequently spaces over which they had sajied in the morning had by evening become stretches of dried mud. g miles away, did not make much of a| hit with Miss White who had her eye! on bigger things. So one day she de-| cided to go into pictures—just like| that, She dressed in her best and procuring a list of studios from a friend took the New Haven to New York and commenced making the Effective Treatment. Mrs. 'Arris—Yer want ter take care o’ that cold, Mrs, Green. Yer ought to git a pennorth of ukerljptus from the chemist, put it in a jug o’ boiling wa- ter, ’old yer ’ead over it, and ignore It.—Pearson’s Weekly. i i Bemidji Train Schedule M. & L—Union Depot No. 32 South Bound ....Lv. 7:36a.m. No. 34 South Bound ....Lv.11:20 p.m. No. 81 North Bound ....Lv. 6:16 p.m. No. 33 North Bound ....Lv. 4:46am. G. N.—Great Northern No. 34 East Bound. Depot . 11.68 a.m. No. 36 East Bound . 2:22a.m. No. 83 West Bound. 8:32 p.m. No. 35 West Bound. . 2:62a.m. No. 106 South Bound.,..Lv. 6:05a.m. No. 106 ........... v...Ar. 7:65 pm. M, R. L. & M.—Red Lake Depot No. 11 North Bound....Lv. 1:30 p.m. NO.12 (ovvinrtivrennnnns Ar. 9:45am. 800—Union Depot No. 162 East Bound Lv. 9:40am. No. 163 West Bound Lv. 4:55pm. Root grafting of apples, elm and lilac may be done now. Place grafts in sand.or sawdust so they will not dry out until planted. i T ’QAPPETIZING SPECIALS for SATURDAY ! at the PALACE MEAT MARKET - Fresh cauliflower New carrots. Gréen onions. Garden radishes. Fancy celery. Iceburg head lettuce. Ripe tomatoes. Florida strawberries. Fresh dressed chicken.’ Choice cuts of beef, pork, veal, lamb. -ELKO HAT SHOP - The Store Ahead . v Our manager leaves for Chicago Saturday night for a new supply of trimmed hats, Watch. for our an- nouncement of our White Opening which will be held at an ear- ly date. We visit the markets at least every three weeks, thus be- ing able 1;0 supply you with the newest possible millinery—New tailored hats ’specially priced for tomorrows selling. OO O SRRRRAOY The Garment Shop oot T OO T T I DT IO Spring’s Newest Apparel Modes Await Your Selection at the Garment Shop rounds. Ordinarily history would tell that this young stock actress was unsucessful in her efforts but the fact is that she was engaged at the second studio she entered. Theodore Whar- ton, then a prominent figure with Pathe needed just such a type as Miss White and gave her a small role in a picture he was making. This was her start and from that time on her climb up the ladder of fame was so rapid that it was difficult to follow her and almost before the picture world realized it a new screen lumin- ary had appeared. COLDS INTERFERE WITH BUSINESS Dr. King’s New Discovery relieves them and keep you going on the job Women's Spring Suits, priced at effects. els. Fifty contiguous of almost anfailing checking and relievis TR i bt aiTeat e roud achievement of Dr. King's New Grandparents, fathers, mothers, the kiddies —all have used and ar?t;ling it as the safest, surest, most pleasante to-take remedy they know of. Sold by all druggists. 60c and $1.20. Keep Bowels On Schedule Late, retarded functioning throws the whole day's duties out of geas. K the system cleansed, the appe- tite lively, the stomach staunch with Dr, King's New Life Pills. Mild and tonic in action, Sold everywhere. 25¢. Phone 850 T e e T e e T T T ] = $25, $35, $45 up to.$75 Splendid group of elegant spring suits with style touches that give an air of individuality to the wearer. Shop models, perfect in style and tailoring. Blouse back mod- - els, new boxcoat ideas, also the strictly tailored and semi fiitted ideas, including the belted and novelty types, such as the vested SMART BLOUSES, $4.95 up to $15.00. Georgette and Crepe de Chine. ' All wanted colors for spring. Round, V-neck and cellarless mod- Sizes for stout figures. : ‘SUCCESSOR TO SCHNEIDER BROTHERS M. M. Jagrin, Mgr. IlIIlllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllliIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII!IIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIlflllllllI!IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlIIIIIIlillllIIlIIlIIIlIIIIIllIIlIIIIIIII L] ’ All are exclusive Garment BEMIDJI, MINN. A « o & i W

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