Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 22, 1919, Page 4

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" BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER G. E. CARSON _ “E. H. DENU "Vige-Pres. and Treas. et I et ‘Manager L% under act No attention paid-to annofymouk contributions. \Writer's name must be kno n to theieditor, but not necessarily for publicati > "Communications for the Weekly Ploneer muat reach i oh’h not Jater than Tuesday of each week to insure publication nthes entiissue —— = THE WEBKLY PIONEER pages, containing mfiznmnmum,m Published l'.f;n nmm“f-'q sent p:-m to any address, fer, in advance, §1.50 .- OFFICIAL GOUNTY AND GITY PROCEEDINGS _——_—————————_r——_-_—_— BLUES WILL BANQUET CAMPAIGN WINNERS Well, it’s all over but the banquet to be given the winners in the membership campaign ‘by the Bemidji association, the White side being victorious over the Blue in securing the greafc— est number of members, and Major E. A. Barker’s boys will do the honors in the most approved manner, for they are all good boosters for the association. : The total enrollment numibered 341 and include the livest aggregation that ever organized in the_eity, capable of taking good care of whatever confronts Bemidji in her future welfare, : and each and every campaigner and every new member are en- i titled to hearty congratulations.; BEMIDJI SHOULD ATTEND RED LAKE FAIR Bemidji should be present in-force on “Bemidji Day” 'at the Red Lake fair, when the Chippewas, sponsored by Superin- tendent Cross of the Red Lake agency, hold their annual next September. S The residents of the reservation are progressing in every- detail. They are farmers'who have learned the ways of modern production. They are land owners and can breed stock. The women are adepts in household arts and their homes evidence their good judgment, good:taste and splendid handiwork. They are good friends of Bemidji and do a great deal of their trading in this city, where they.are heartily welcome at -the stores and on all other missions. v The fair this year promises to exceed past similar achieve- ments and with the displays.in practically every class, sports program and other features, Bemidji should have a large turn- out on “Bemidji Day,” the feature day of the fair and so desig- nated in compliment to the county seat. L ———— MIGHT TRY THIS FOR A WEEK - -Politeness: costs nothing; it is worth much. Take a stroll -along one of pur local streets and you will meet certain people ‘whé'ne 1.0f a' courteous greeting. As you pass them by hey-leave in yournind a feeling of wholesome friendliness.and Brotherly:love. You instinctively extend them the courtesy of ought and ‘a friendly greeting in return. The two of 2 artother ray of sunshine to the community y little rays make-a most pleasing whole. Try s1f “‘uninterruptly for '@ week, and then analize your You will be surpriged.at the result. : :who'laid the 'plans for the Bemidji association drive ‘hard throughout the campaign ever needed a d;”.all he.would.have to do would be to say “ask “Would he get it? - Well, just ask Bemidji. B And that group of live wire members of the Bemfdji asso- ciation found enjoyment in bidding up a single doughnut to - $185 for the Salvation Army ‘“doughnut day” drive, during the noon day lunch hour Wednesday, in which the membership campaign was at its peak. Sy S The profiteer swats the consumer and the consumer takes g out on the fly. Some comparison, but true—distressingly : true. We read much in the press about America saving England and feeding the world. But can you recall a single instance in which the rest of the world came to the aid of America? ‘Van Allens. It is a clean, wholesome story, capably acted throughout, and artistically directed. 'NEWSOF THE | THEATERS - |+ WONDERFUL HART PICTURE. 5 William S: Hart’s new Artcraft Aj§| Bicture,. “The Money Corral,” which 7|18 the feature of the bill'a tthe Elko ‘|theatre tomorrow and Sunday, is in ¢ MOST UNUSUAL ROLE." ™ | “Bella Donna,” which' ‘will ~BE shown at the Grand theatre tonight, is ‘the tale.of an adventuress who : poisons her English husband in or- -! der. to be-free to. go.to.an Egyptia) ' iwith whom she has fallen in love [ A physician however saves the life of her intendend victim. The Bgyp-|: tian casts her off and when she re« : turns humbly.to her home, she fin tthe doors shut in her face by the doe- tor. In despair she flees to the grim' desert to expiate her crimes in soliv tude, . S5 .. When Robert Hichens’ great nov| “Bella Donna,” was published- s eral years ago, it created an imme) literary sensation. It was dramatizeg and in it Alla Nazimova, the distin<}: 2 i guished Russian actress, won h first American triumph, and an evea greater success than she had}™™ achieved in the Ibsen roles which' made her famous. 7y R ny respects a wonderful photoplay. is a rattling romance of the West gnd East and both the production and the players supporting Mr. Hart ire most. satisfactory. Pige Bullt Like a Cornet. A tebacco’ pipe of ‘unusual’ design Baechtel of ‘Hagerstown, Md. Every pipe smoker knows that the longer the stem of ‘his.pipe the cooler will be the pes with stems a few feet ‘beeh in use in. different untries fon, many. years, but their kward length precluded: thelr use side of the house. The inventor of e pipe.circumvented the.difficulty by {ling the stem of the pipe like the be of a_cornet or signal horn.. The s afe connected at their lower end y form a dripping chamber for fecelv- g ‘the sallva" which accumulates in ‘the stem. Each coll has an !ndepend- t opening into-the dripping chamber ind a screw. cap at the bottom gives ‘access to it for the removal of the accumulated saliva. - The smoke, in ‘passing through the cofls of the stem, s drained several times of saliva and nicotine. 1 THE AMERICAN WAY. The first of the new pictures, -starring Dorothy Green and Arthut ‘Ashley, is called ‘“The American Way,” will be shown at the ‘Elko theatre tonight only. ¢ : «The American Way” is the thrill-| " ing and irresistible way in which Richard Farrington (played by Ar- “thur Ashley) courts and wins young stopped to read it in the street, a “Betty . Winthrop - (Dorothy . Green), |crowd. gathered: to. hear - the news. ‘the charming ward of the Stuyvesant Fined $2.50 for ‘“‘obstruction.” Birmingham, Eng.—When John Turner bought a ‘newspaper and .MéDonou‘gh, assistant secretary of the St. Paul a ‘lias been- Inyented by Warren Murray | s Senorita Olga \ Eschaurre -of Chile, who ‘has: been very popular-in-society circlés of the- capital during-the: past winter and spring, is to.marry Senor Carlos Uribe, brother of Senora: de Ureta, wife of the minister from Co- lombfa. i oo TELL AGE OF OCEANS Scientists Figure It Out by Meas- uring Salt, Declaté Seas-Were Born About90,000,- ‘000 “Yeurs ' Ago—Water ‘Ia w89 Analyzed, U7 Washington.—How old is thé ocean? Standing on the shore and looking out over the expanse -of water, the'ocean seems a fixed and eternal fact, but the seas had a beginning.and will have an end. Sclentists say.that when this time comes the last drop of water ‘will have been absorbed into ‘the earth’s crust, its surface will be 8- desert and all life will become ‘extinct. The age of the oceans:hdve:been estimated by a leading aufim. ty, Pro- fessor Frank Clarke of the United States Geological survey; at/about 90,- 000,000 years. This, of-tourse,is only | an approximation, but is based on carefully studied scientific data. All the water was once cContained in the vapor that surrounded {he: glow- ing, slowly cooling mass which is now the earth, After the gases ¢ombined to form water the process of making the ocean salt began. This-was the work of the rivers. Mineral salts were extracted from: the rocks ovewwhich they flow and deposited In mflm Each year the actioti of the’ ] is said to make the ocean slightly more salty, and this'is the hasis on which its age is calculated. The amount of salt_carried by the rivers of the world || 1s computed by the-sclentists and com- pared with the total ‘quantity’in the:}] ocean, After evaporation and the ve- locity of currents have been"consid- ered, it Is possible to. calculdte how long it has taken to make the sea water as salty as it is today. .. About three and a half per tent of mineral salts and 963 per cent fresh water make up the oceans. 'Three- fourths of the solid mattér i§ common salt, other tagredients being chloride, sulphste and bromide of magnesium; sulphate and carbonaté ' of liive and- sulphate of petash,” besides ti s of various other minerals and metals, in- cluding gold and silver. FOR 3 “MARRIED” REGIMENTS Regulars With Foreign Brides to Be | Placed in Special Units Says War_ Department. ‘Washington—Special regiments, com- osed. lurgely if not entirely of mar- ried men, probably - will result’ from the- war: department’s policy regard- ing the disposition of régulars who are returning to this country with French -wives. Orders have been sent to com- manding officers of ' debatkation ports to transfer such°men and their wives || to Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., Fort Ethan Allen, Vt.; or Fort 'Myer, -Va,, “when | they. belong to the cavalry, and to Madison Barracks, N. Y., in the case of infantrymen. a3 Offieilal estimates are that 20,000 e;t;_@il soldlers married foreign "A majority of these men were 1gcgency enlistments, however, and belleved three regiments will be ent to accommodate the regu- lars, ROMANS - LIVING ' IN -CAVES High Rents Cause Return to Prehls: toric Dwelling- Places In Italian Capital. Rome.—"Cavemen,” relics of prehis- toric days of human housing, live in Rome side by side with institutions of art and learning.” The caves are under the very shadow of the British Art school and the Itallan College of Modern Arts.| Within a short distance is.the na-! tional stadium. On the other side. of ' them Is the Porta del Popolo, through which before the days of railways all pligrims to Rome passed. ! The reversion of Romans to the caves is not retrogression. It is eva-; ston of high rents. All efforts of the police to eject the tenants from the caves have failed. The “cavemen” move out but return as soon as the police depart. ' DCCTORS DENTISTS Offiee—O’Lea Phones—Office 3 . Res. ‘DR. D. L. STANTON DR. J. T. DRS. GILMORE & McCANN Physicians and Surgeons Office Miles Block . Ibertson Block DR. E. H. MARCUM Res. phone 211 Oftice hours, 11 a.m. to 12 m. 2 p. m tobp m Schroeder Block Office phone 18 DR. EINER JOHNSON' Physician and Surgeon: Bemidji, ‘Minn. Phone 396 DR. L. A. WARD Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. BUSINESS AND | PROFESSIONAL i - DR: E. H. SMITH Physician and Sur..a-} " Office Secirrity Bank Block DR. J. W. DIEDRICH DENTIST owser Bldg. DENTIST Office in Winter . Block X TUOMY: - DENTIST North of Markham Hotel, Gibbons Block Phone 230 DR. H. A. NORTHROP OSTEOPATHIC AND SURGEON . Oftice phone 153 _LUNDE and DANNENBERG Chiropractors Hours 10 to 12 a.m.; 2 to §, 7-to 8 p.m. Phone 401-W . 1st National Bank Bldg. Calls made A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. SPECIALIST Eye—Ear—Nose—Throa! Glasses Pitte 3 1 . C. R. SANBORN, M. D, 4 * il’hy;ici.n and Surgeon "' Office: Miles Block House Phone 449— oftice phone 55 | A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon’ Office in Mayo Block Res. Phone 337 PEACHES! 37C-n Bemidji ‘3rd’ Stree! ‘[ 'J. WARNINGER . VETERINARY SURGEON ..Oftice and Hospital 3 doors west. . of Troppman's, Phone No. 209 “Bemidji, Minn. t and Irvine ave. ffice 3-R; Res!' 99: LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block BUSINESS Bemidji, Minn. MUSICAL -GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods; Shoes, Flour v Feed, Bto. W. G. SCHROEDER Phone 65 INSTRUMENTS Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines J. Bisiar, Mgr. LT INHINNNn NN =y PEA takes ‘three memberships. AUTOMATIC 514 Minnesota Ave, Bemidji Phone 573-W Phone 560 yond.cavil. ort ourselves in a nner - that = cause us to be re-’ membered by those whom: we, serve. Our. busi-.}. ness conduct is be- Adm charged on our books cost one: cent a word per issue. No ads run for less than 26c. it ! RANGE CHES! BEMIDJI 6AS €0, The Bemidji Civic and Commerical Association has just coi\jne into its own. The:wonderful drive for membership has prac- tically made every merchant and professional man a member ‘of the association’dnd a booster. Onme of our prosperous farmers ) The desire of every old member of the club is that every new member should and must come to .the meetings. The Association wants to use all of the new live blood which has just been instilled into its veins. Let ‘each new member resolve that he will work_ for the dt:velépment‘af this beautiful city and community and that when he has paid his membership, he has only started in the game. Northern National Bank 5 IllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlI|IIIIIIIIIIIllll_|lllIllllllllI!llilllllillfl‘ll!,llll‘!‘!lllllllll|==v U ‘Look over our Iing of 6as Ranges and Fixtures PRICES REASONABLE - - TERMS - EASY - PEACHES! Get them for canning ndw_fi Wo hare Just received a big shipment of fine.~ - CALIFORMIA ALBERTA .~ 'PEACHES . -~ and they arereal “Peaches” Every ohe',' of . them is'’a PEACH You krioiw: that canned goods will be high and the pri RATE this winter and we believe you will be money ahead- by buying now OTTO G. SCHWANDT 210 Third Street - Phone 33 ceisonly = - Defective e

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