Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 29, 1920, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SPORT NEWS WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City 5, at St. Paul 1. ‘Milwaukee 1, at Minneapolis 7. Other games postponed—cold weather. """ AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 4, at Cleveiand 5. 5 ‘. Detroit 0, at St. Louis 6. “Boston 7, at Philadelphia 7 (14 in- nings. Darkness stopped the game). Other games postponed—rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburg 1, at Chicago 11. Other games postponed—-rain. AMERICANS SECOND FOR HOCKEY HONORS Antwerp, Apri] 29.—~fAmerica won second place in the ‘Olympic hockey contest, defeating the Gzecho-Slovaks last night, 16 to 0. The Americans scored almost at will. They will re- ceive the prize tonight. The score at the end of the first half was: American, 7; Czecho-Slo- vakians,0. The Americans had little difticul- ‘ty fin scoring at will in the first half of the eontest, although Czecho-Slo- waks showed occasional bursts of speed. Seven goals were scored «u the first period, while in the second Lar- ry McCormick made five of the nine scored by the Americans. The secvond half was much the same as the first. ) The American line-up: Goal, Wid- enborner; defense, Fitzgerald and Goheen; rover, Synnott; forwards, Conrroy, J. McCormick and ‘Larry MeCormick. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL .Mr. and ‘Mrs. James K.-Given re- tarned this morning from'a month’s ‘honeymoon trip. They visited in Du- lath, Yale, Mich., Detroit, Mich.,, Port Sarnia and Wiarton, Ontario, Rochester and Minneapolis., Captain E. L. Hooper of Minneapo- tis spent Wednesday on an inspection tour of the United States army re- cruiting stations in this part of the state. Shipwreck in New Picture A careless-helmsman, flirting with the serving girl, wrecks a yachting party on a desert t?plcnl island in “Male and Female,’”” a Paramount- Arteraft super-picture, produced by Cecil B. DeMille, which will come to the Elko theatre in the near future. Moreover, it's a real yacht and a real ¥ ‘that”come together. It's and a large amount of money were risked for the sake of realism in this production, which is a screen version of Sir James M. Barrie’s great play, *The ‘Admirahle Orichton.”- A Hgndicap Raoe. The Sire—You loaf too much. If you hustle prosperity will be sure to Gellow. The . Son—But I don't want pros- perity trailin’ after me all the time, 'm givin’ it a chance to catch up. THE TOILER. She—Does a farmer have to work . Burd? [} He—Yes. But not as hard as the , average person who has to buy what = farmers raise. IZXERESE SRS 8RS8 x SOLWAY x e e A A few friends were invited to the Martin Sorenson home Saturday eve- ning to help celebrate his fortieth birth anniversary. Misses Elva, Dosena and Ovina Peterson spent the time between trains Sunday with their mother. A dance was held here Saturday night. A good time is reported, though the attendance was not what it would have been had it not been raining. Music was furnished by the Bagley orchestra . The buss drivers are camplaining of the bad condition of the roads in the vicinity of Solway. Hay is in great demand in this woodwork in the Solway State bank. vieinity. Both the hay dealers have completely sold out. WAIT, DONT OPERA' Zake Sto-li- - Prescription Doctor's for Dissolving Gall Stones and :.or Complicated 3 One box gives instant relief in all <cases of Gall Stones, liver trouble, such :as indigestion, dyspepsia, chronic ap- pendicitis, gas, sour stomach, ulcers, «catarrh, pains in stomach and back, con- stipation, etc. Don't wait, but get a ®box of Sto-li-gal from your druggist today. Price, $100. Attention! No fake testimonials, but positive facts. Sto- m-gal has ‘helped thousande of people ~it will positively give you relief $n all ailments mentioned, regardless of your age or duration of trouble. Write for free literature. DepartmentF, igestive Chemical Co., St. Paul, Minn. SeM in Bemidji at Boardman’s Corner Drug Store and Barker's Drug.; Cass e, ardner’s Drug; ~Blackduck, Meon’s Drug: Bagley, O'Neil's Drug, and sts_everywhere. _ ne of the big scenes where lives Of Alaska, [USE WAR ARTS IN PEACE TIME Lessons Learned "lfver There”, to Be Used in Making of Maps. WORK NOW WELL UNDER WAY Plan Worked Out by Which Various Government Boards Will Co-Op- i erate in Making Large Scale Map of Country. New York.—While drawing up I‘ summary of intelligence for a corps of wmaneuver in France last winter the officer in charge found himself in need of a little outside information. Turne’ ing to his sergeant, he said: “Sergeant, where is the island of St. Helena? “Sir.” said the sergeant, “I do not know ; but if the colonel will furnish me with a car and a bachured map Il find it.” Our three armies went to the front with a supply of maps which contrib- uted mightily to our success. Last July, says the New York Post, the en- gineering council called President Wil- son’s attention to the lack of co-ordina- tion in the map-making agencies: of ‘his country. The matter was not olgeon-holed ; various bureaus were re- quested to confer and decide upon a general plan by which the work could be carried on most expeditiously and without overlapping or duplication. Td Map 3000,000 Square -Miles. To make large-scale maps:iof?over three million square miles of ‘territory is a gigantic task. But it is hoped and believed that it will be achieved. Qne danger les in overorganization. There are at present no fewer than eleven map-making and three map-using boards operating under government control. It will readily be seen that{- the bureau of solls needs one kind of map, the bureau of Indian affairs an- other. But, except for highly special-.’ 1zed work, the United States geological survey would seem to be the logical body to prepare the standard topo- graphic maps. It bas its own photo- lithographic and engraving plants, and the maps it has already produced have been declared by experts to be the equal of any. B . It is safe to assume that it was the excellence of detail of the maps. fur- nished us by the allies that led the conference to feel that to do the work for the whole country as France or Germany had done it would take too much time.. Better a map with few details now than goe with all in.the distant future. Ong-third of. the area of ‘continental United States, exclusiv > has already been mapped 1 The establishment ‘of horizontal _and, vertical controls; fs abdut balf completed. And a plan has been worked out by which the vari- ous boards will co-operate. Making the personnel permanent will do much to standardize the work. yAerial Surveying. Revisions are to be.made as fast as changes due to development oceur. There is to be a central information’of- fice, not simply for the benefit of the bureaus concerned, but for the general public as well. The general scale rec- ommended is 1:62 500; where larger or smaller scales are desirable a special corps will be appointed. Aerial survey- | , ing is to play an important part. Graphic scales in English and metric ‘| units will be printed on all maps pre- pared for general use, as well as a dia- gram of the control on which the map is based, together with date of survey and location of all permanent marks. That each map will explain thé sym- bols used hardly needs to be pointed out. In modern warfare the map is more powerful thap the .sword. Germany knew this. Prisoners captured from the Germans could locate any object, from a siugle machine-gun nest to a full battery of artillery; they had been taught to read their maps. The men of our own divisions, from ranking offi- cers to scout privates, became skilled at it—in time; but it was difficnlt work at first. We were not a’ map-reading people. Men in the service who two years ago would scarcely have attempt- || ed to find their way from point to point within a single county would at present know precisely how to orient themselves anywhere In France if sup- plied with France's excellent cartes’ topographiques. The same can be done in this country once the necessary maps are available.. It is.nrerely a question of utilizing the arts of war In thnes of peace. It is an important en- terprise now happily under way.. .If the government completes it the pub- lic's interest will be equaled only by its gratitude. « The Lure of a Siren. o LaGrange, Ky.—When- the -siren blows here, all citizens will grab thelr’ guns and gun. For it means a door or ‘ window ofithe People’s bank has-been opened. Prompted by robbery of seven Kentucky banks recently, the People's bank has placed a siren oa top of the bullding, with an attachment leading to all windows and doors. A Tragedy of the War. Owensboro, Ky.—Mrs. Lucy R. Law- rence, an aged widow, has received 8 box from overseas headquarters.- -fa it was the Bible she had given hér son Armstead, her letters to him. which be had never lived to read, and one bhe had written to her just: before he || Barley, bushel none. to $6 per cwt. GRAIN AND HAY' Oats, bushel ........ $1.60 Red Clover, medium, Popcorn, pound .... Wheat, No 1 VEGETABLES. Wy Cabbage, cWwt. .........$5.00-§6.00 Onions, dry, cwt. .$6.00-36,00 ns, CWt. ...... B .$6.00-38.00 Dairy butter. pound Buttexfat ......... Eggs, fresh, dozen ... MEATR MUutton c.ccccreccnseciosees lB0 Hogs, .16 esansssss190-20¢ The following prices were GRAIN AND HAY Wheat, No. 1 .......... 92.85-$2.90 Wheat, No. s . ..$2.75-32.80 Wheat, No. 3 . $2.60-$2.65 Oats . 2 Barls Rys, N . No. 1 Clove! Rye straw - Corn ... .... No. 2 Timothy hay .. Potatoes, per cwt. . Beans, brown, cwt. .Beets, per cwt .... Carrots, per cwt. ... Onions, dry, per cwt Eggs, per dozen . ... Gabhage, ton Rutabagas, per cwt. Butterfat ..... Mution. D . ...w..c.eme...o20c-160 Pork, dressed . er” contained-in the huskto be a sorbed by the milk; this cha ailk’s quantity and gives it a pal taste. £ © Life's Treasures. ; The gold of life does not lie hidden in mines;. it sparkles in tiny :sands:all \long the commoii path of every day. He. who only gathers it bit. by bit from daily duties and pleaSures and opportunities and friendships will find himself the possessor of the real treas- ure at last. . Home of the Ptarmigan. In the Canadian. Rocky mountains there'is a valley where the ptarnsrigan lives and breeds. This region has long heen named Ptarmigan valley, and its guardian penk Ptarmigan mountain. -In the wild area thus named after.a bird will be found one of the many beguty spots of Canada. o o —_— “CRUSADING FOR THE RIGHT” -~ The famous French sculptor, Charles Raphael Peyre, and his remarkable. statue “Crusading for the Right,” which he created in memory of the services of the marines .at Chateau- Thierry. . Chicago, April 29.—Potato receipis today, 9 cars. Market dull.. Northern Whites, sacked and bulk, $7 to $7.10. New, ! Bemidji Potato Market—All varieties, bulk, small lots $3 to $3.25 per bushel. -Carload lots, sacked and loaded, $5.50 BEMIDJI CASH MARKET QUOTATIONS. would you do without Newspaper Advertisemen‘ts?_ \ Dressed beef, pound........12¢c-14c Turkeys, live, pound. .......40c-4b6¢c 0ld Toms, live, pound.. . .26c-30c Geese, live, pound ... +.26c30c €13 What if there were no ad- Ducks, live, 1b. ..... g 16¢-18¢ = . Hens, 4 1bs. and over.......... 26¢ vertisements in any neWS' HIDES I paper? -y F Cow hides, No. 1, 1b........ % 164 R Bull nides, No. 1 Cieiss| 1O Lost and found articles Kip hides, No. 1, pound....22¢c-25¢ might never be restored g:lt skins, N:. 1, pound ... ;’;00:-321: @ i B . cons, ieee..8175-52.00 wn ' Buying Ho:s:nl'xldee:? large, oun.’. v .:8-39 to t.helr o ers'.‘a % 9 Horse bides, large, each. | 1 [§9-310 selling and renting houses Wool, semi bright,. . .01 1.} 26e ‘would be greatly delayed being paid at Stillwater, Minn.. Merchants would be com- at time of going to press of today’s Pioneer: Veal Garlic, Iv........ Parsnips, per cwt. Squash., cwt...... Packing butter .. LIVE POULTRY Turkeys, 9 1bs: up ..... Turkeys, small and thin. Geese, 12 1be. up, anc tat. Ducks, fat ..... cesesecen Hens, heavy, 4 1bs and over .3 -|Springers, live ...... PR 1 00 | Hens, 5 1bs up, fat. +....ove.n. 32¢ Dressed poultry 3c per pound over live atock. HIDES Cowhides, No. 1 Bull hides, No. 1 . 'Kipps, No. 1 .... Ll18c -Calk skins, No. 1. . .35¢, ..... $1.50 Horse h}rie‘s. o ‘Wouol, bright. . pelled to depend almost entirely upon those who passed by their stores for their -trade. Such a condition yfvouid set the hands of thé clock of’ progress back two hun- dred years. It would limit trade. Itwould bring de- lays and annoyances and make purchasing risky. and expensive.. Z This goes to show how im- portant newspaper ad- vertisements have be- come in our everyday affairs. = Varled Climes, Varied.Habits. v Natives of hot climates who spend ith- much time in the water rarely. use Read them fully a’nd falth soup except for a shave or shampoo. fully. It may mean many 4 The Esquimau 1s a reckless bather A b 2 during the. fishing season, when he is added. advantfl'ges !n FOR SALE— .Baby buggy. ‘forced to"wade to disentangle his nets, your life and dollars in Minnesota avenue. Phone 594-W.| but his wife and family think handling k tbo 3t5-1| ‘wet nets absolves them: from! further your pockein 0k. ; s . 0 - | . bathing rites. 5 2 . Milk From Coconuts: * N6t Their Measure. Along the Orange river. natives have Bankers are the last men to com- an ingenious way of producing “milk.” | mit such an indiscretion 'as to speak After cutting the top from 4 coebnut | of their friends as men of. sterling in- they- place it over ashes 801that “the | tegrity.—American Baiiker): 9 4 ‘waymth may cause the fat' #a® “but- | S Sl PR These Special Values Monday and N Tuesday Again placing on sale these two days, dozens afid dozens of | .Ready-to-Wear Monogram Strictly Hand-Made rPattern Hats, | ‘made exclusively for us. At special price of : : ; We assure you, that regardless of what may appear and wh‘at folks inay"sa-&, we,; . even &t regular prices, will save you from $2.00 and up on évery hat‘that you‘.f: may look a!:' or buy here. So at:special pri;:es you can figure out just how much you_ "~ ANOTHER SPECIAL: In this lot there will be values extreme. No two alike. All ‘entirely different. 5 Sure that you will find values $10.00, $11.00 to $13.50. You must take a look at these. Remember that these are on special sale these two days only. Xy . MANY NEW ITEMS IN DRY GOODS IN THIS WEEK Items that you will be sure to like and that are priced at our usual low prices. The last days of our Rainbow Sale, which has so many special values that you should : not miss, ends Saturday. - FOR CLEAN-UP DAYS - A We have rakes, hoes, spading forks and other items you need at 39c, 43c, 48c, .. 69c and 98¢, $1.19, and assure you again that you will buy for less here. b GARDEN SEEDS : All new, full size large packages, at 5 cents—Peas, Corn, Béans, large cartons, at 15c—Lawn Grass Seeds, 15c and 25c. : Buy all your out door toys such as wagons, coasfer wagons, velocipedes, kiddie : cars, roller skates, etc. i AGAIN WE SAY, YOU WILL SAVE HERE CARLSON, Of Course THE BIG DEPENDABLE STORE ON.BELTRAMI Defcfiw

Other pages from this issue: