Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 15, 1920, Page 6

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VERY APTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY BSFMIDJI PIONBER PUBLISEING CO. ®. B. CARSON; Pres. B. H. DENU, Sec. aad Mgr. G. W. HARNWELL, Editor o Telephone 923 Entered at the postoffice at Bemidjl, Minn,, as second- ‘elase matter under Act.of Congress of March 3, 1870, = — “No attention paid to snonymous contributions. Writer's name must be- known to the editor, but not m:fl" for publication. Communications for reskly Ploneer must reach this office not later th:.n esday of each week to insure publication in the ourrent issue. Three Months «...c.. 148 WEBKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, publishea’ eovery Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for, in advance, $5.00. GERMANY MUST OBEY. The news came with a welcome sound that the allies had adopted a peremptory tone toward the German go%remment in the matter of carrying out the terms of the Versailles treaty. Investigations have proved that Germany has been not only lax _ about the fulfilment of these terms, but so ex- tremely negligent as to seem deliberate in the failure to meet her agreement. o Seventy-two naval vessels that should have been turned over to the allies have been retained, for example, and there are still 7,850 airplanes in viola- t & tion of the terms. Cannon and small arms have i been withheld in large numbers, and 'scores of ! ; thousands of soldiers in excess of the number al- lowed have been kept under arms. : The new agreement which the Germans have been forced to sign, and which they signed under pro- test, contains the following provisions. Germany said: ' 1. Immediately disarm certain of its forces, in- cluding the security police. 2. Publish a proclamation asking for the im- mediate surrender of all weapons and firearms in the hands of the civilian population. 3. Abolish immediately compulsory service. 4. Surrender to the allies guns and cannon which it possesses above the limit fixed by the treaty of Versailles. Moreover, says the allies: “If on October 1 the German army is not reduced to 150,000 men, the allies will proceed to occupy German territory in the Ruhr or any other part of German territory, and will not evacuate it until all the conditions of the present agreement have been fulfilled.” The Germans sought for loopholes and techni- Connecticut is so short. of school teachers that prayers are being offered for an increased supply.- Better salaries, however, would-probably prove more “effective.—St. Cloud Times. O One reason for the reduction in lumber prices may be the ample supply of discarded platform planks.—Ex. PR Bryan has lost his hold on the democratic party— but John Barleycorn. has succeeded in securing a tighter grip.—Mankatg Free Press. 3 0 ; 7 A Plymouth Rock hen laid one perfect egg with another perfect egg inside of it.. Talk about effjc- iency! She doubled her output without increasing her machinery or her hours.—Little Falls Transcript. _——— s G It is said that the firm of Sears-Roebuck, Chi- cago, keep two hundred girls who do nothing else but check newspapers to ascertain.the volume and kinds of advertising carried on throughout the country. The firm is repbrted to receive about -every paper published.—Stillwater Gazette, 00— Under the Babcock plan a tax on automobiles will build the macadamized roads; and the saving in gasoline -an dtires will more than pay the tax,. 9K K K XK KK K K X K XK X %|day evening. * LIBERTY * IS S R SRS S SR E RS E S John Erickson, who has been on the sick list for a few days is now Better. Mr. and Mrs. Herman. Klasen and ;lmily visited Mr. Helberg last Sun- ay. Mr. and Mrs. James Long and fam- ily spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dahl and family. Mrs. Lars Myre called Champy Petri Saturday. George Fuller went to Bemidji Sat- urday, returning Monday. Peter Utter has now commenced haying with Champy Petri assisting him. Mr. Utter has a very fine stand of both tame and wild hay. " Herman Klasen and John Farber and now helping Lars Myre with his tame hay. Mr, and Mrs. Champy Petri and|With a country home. : erations. on Mrs. son John, and daughter Catherine, were callers in Puposky Sunday. Mr. Helbig called on his daughter Mrs. H. Klasen and family Monday. Mr. and Mrs. H. Klasen autoed to Bemidji Monday. . Martin Sande is assisting A. Beck- er put up his fine stand of tame hay this week. LA AR R SRS LS SRR SRS * TENSTRIKE * 3ok 2k ok ok ¥ % o 2ok % % % James Taylor is home from St. An- . thony’s hospital in Bemidji where he was confined for a few days. - Mr. .'Taylor swallowed .. some gasoline which’ poisoned his stomach. .. Mrs. William Travis has returned !, from a six weeks trip thru California. Slie ‘was accompanied home by her,l really don't get ‘mother, Mrs. Provo, who is her guest RS at the present time. at all, L AL A number of Tenstrike folks at- "tende_di the dance at the Spur, last Fri- | Journal. EMIDJI DAILY PIONEER The Community Cliub met Tuesday. afternoon at Mrs. M. E. Knappen's The Bluebird Lumber Co. are now sawing lath.. They have sawed about 30,000 a day since’ commencing op- more power to move them; than of yore. . Fear it the only weapon of any avail. . Fear, therefore, the allies have decided to" use, with' the fear taking ’ form in force if necessary. v ‘Americans can but ‘admire the stand of the com- bined powers who have taken matters into their . hands® in so.sumiary a fashion, though owing to failure ‘to ratify the treaty, they have no power to add weight of American' votes to this just and necessary action. . L4 o “OPINIONS.” (Vance Chapman.) Now comes one Townley and says that the Non- partisan league does not intend to be a “Larry Hodgson side line; that the organization has only one object, the “Redemption” of Minnesota with the league as the controlling factor, and that de- spite its defeat at the June primaries it will be v there with a full ticket at the November election. The same league ticket which featured the Jume primaries will be offered the voters at the November election and if it cannot secure the, farmer-labor title now held by Cyrus King of Deer River it will go on the ballot under some other name. The idea is for Mr. King; the farmer-labor gubernatorial candidate and others on the ticket to withdraw-in favor of the league’s candidates, but the withdrawal stunt is something Vet to be arranged. Friends say Mr. King will not withdraw and if such is the' case Mr. Townley will have to file his candidates by ‘peti- tion. At a meeting of leaguers held in Minneapolis last week, Townley was the big speaking card and he took advantage of the occasion to send out a frantic call for financial help. A million dollars’ was his cry. and he gave it out cold -that unless. league members busied themselves. that he might have to pass the organization up.. “No. nickel stuff for him,” he said. The enemy was spending millions he declared, and the league wuold have to dig if it wanted to live. bl PR While Boss Townley is open in his declaration for another .go at the enemy and with the same ticket which went down to defeat at the June pri- maries, negotiations between him and the demo- cratic ‘powers that be for league support for the democratic national and state ticket are not_entire- ly at an end. They are still dickering, it is said. One well known democratic state senator from the southern part of the state said this week that it was of general knowledge that the leaguers down his way were for “Larry Ho” and the same story comes from a number of léague strongholds iin the Seventh district. “My opinion,” said this southern Minnesota senator, “is that Shipstead, if he comes up .again in the fall, will be badly knifed by leaguers. Larry is going to get a lot of league votes.”. A say. nothing about the saving in time, nnd the comfort of gliding along' the highway without a jolt or jar.—Onkiq Review. B ———— “Oh, what is 80 rare as & dp&,ixi June” .Annver. ; v “A day in July. For anyone properly attempered %to summer, it’s the perfect month.—Crookston Daily’ Times. < . - —_— The New Orleans Item says we may as well: let Thomas Lipton have: that cup. K We have nothing to put in it over here.-~Mankato Daily Fre i Why should there be a coal situation?. . There is plenty of coal in the: country:and'the ‘means of . transportation could be provided instanter.” :The . mneed of the hour is less talk and more action.—Ex. & You'd Never Think lt.\‘ It seems to us there is an indecent scrambl on for the almighty dollar, considering it only 50 cents.—Stillwater Gazette. ? —_— Serves ’Em Right. If Painted stockings are worn to any extent this I summer, many mosquitoes at summer resorts will die of painter’s colic.—Ex, e <198 3 e ° “ e This quitti.ng work with the hope of securing more money is a false alarm. It has been tried out s/ . many times but always proven a failure.l-Still- water Gazette. & ANNAPOLIS FOUNDED [N ) In North America, With Excep- tion of St. Augustine. |+ catities; as usual,~to-escape: meeting’ their. just..ob- A :-ligations. - Justice and honor, appuent.ly i\gy’,np ) Nova Scotia Earliest Colonized Land _ THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 18, 1920 RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladd er and uric acid troubles are most dangerous be- cause of their insidious attacks. Heed the first warning they give that they need attention by taking v“% The world’s standard for. thess - disorders, will often ward off these dis- eases and strengthen the body ageinst farther attacks. Three sizes, all druggists. 2 hem Valuable Shrubx One. may look for an Increased cul- tivation of the so-called Guatemalan “Jocote maranon” (anacardium occi- dentale), which is quite common ia that country. It has been found that incisions in the trunk cause it to ex- ude a resinous secretion that dissolvea’ like. gum arable, and that is highly useful for pasting purposes. Used In the binding of books, it possesses, be- side its adhesive qualities, the added virtue. of keéping away moths, be- cause of its acrid odor. There is also obtained, from the same plant, a caus- tic oil, which turns black when it strikes the air.” This has been found excellent In thé treatment of furniture. The seeds of the frult are toasted and eaten, - as. well as used for varlous dishes. An 18 per cent extract of ofl is made, ‘which: is' saild by connols- seurs to merit comparison with the best of sweet almonds. According to the newspaper Excelsior of Guatemala the cultivation of the shrub provides a business of increasing profitablenesa, Vlriur irl;gy Fom}d ‘A'rgumnh te Prove That the Chinese Are the ";*More: Progressive. It may strike.the western reader as simply funny, but more than gne Chj- nesp friend has assured me that it 18 the 'Japanese people who are really _conservative, And they back up thelr Aassertion by evidence other than the way In which-Japan has clung through all historic vicigsitudes, te a primitive theocracy, John Dewey writes in Asia Magazine. They point out, for exam- ple that a thousand years ago the Jap- anese :borrowed. the present style of clothing ‘and of household furnishing, of sitting and sleeping on. mats, from China;. that-China has changed sev- eral times, moving constantly in the di- rection of practical utility, of ingeni- ous adaptation of means to needs. The Chinese cuisine is. another argument. It is doubtléss the most: extensive in the world in the varlety of material employed for food, and also the most varied in its combinations. Academic analysis may despise arguments drawn from food,:¢clothing, shelter and fur- nishings, But when one notes the va- riety. and Ingenufty of the processes _and appliances used in dally life and in thie crafts, one Is certain that the Chi- nese mind Is naturally observant and |* adaptive. But it seems upnecessary to labor the question. Many charges have been brought against the Chinese, but 1o one has ever accused them of stu- ‘| ‘pidity; Their undoubted conservatism is something to be explained rather than an explanation of anything. ascopt mo Subscribe for the Pioneer. 1 NDER furniture, all around it, searching out dirt and dust from difficult corners, goes . Premier—doing better cleaning? "in less time and with less effort. IF BACKACHY OR KIDNEYS BOTHER Eat Less Ment,Tlso Take Glass _ of Salts Before Eat- ing Breakfast It’s as satisfactory for one-minute crumb clearing around the dining table as it is for a thorough cleaning of the whole house. And it keeps the home bright and clean ALL the time. - : Come and see the wonderful things Premier does— - - how it saves several hours each week — time you can and should spend in the enjoyment of life. Premier is inexpensive — convenient terms if you desire them. MINNESOTA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER Uric acid in meat excites the kid- neys, they.become' overworked and get sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy;. the bladder is irritated, and you may bq obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help Mlmlmmmmlmumlmlmlmmmmmmmmmwumlmmwwmm them flush off the body’s urinous 5 waste or you'll be a real sick p’er:on # COMEANL shortly. At first you feel a dull mis- - Phone 26 ery in the kidney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, dizzi- ness, stomach gets sour,.tongue coat- ed and you feel rheumatic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat less meat, drink lots of water; also get from. any . pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fam- -fous salts is ‘made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with_lithia, and_has been . used for e generations. to.clean dlogged kidneys = -4 and stimulate them to normal activ- N v 1 ltY., e oo ety 'in S | AVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAWAVAVEVAYA urine, 30 it no longer, is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weak- ness. 4 ; ; .. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot in-| ' {jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water ‘drink which . everyone should take now and then to keep tl}e kidneys clean and active. Drug- gists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in over- coming kidney = trouble while it is only trouble. A // / ! T HAROLD BACHMAN y and his ~ Million_Dollar Congert Band ‘Mrs. James Taylor in | Eldrid, visiting her son, Jimmy Taylor, Jr. and her grand daughter, Mrs. Max Thomas. : . - Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Rice are both ill at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Fred Graham of Bemidji. Mr. and Mrs. two children, Gordon and Alverna, left Sunday for Minneapolis in their car. They expect to be gone a week. When In Doubt,.Add 10 ‘Per Cent. A Wall street man was negotiating ‘bewal of the rain gutters on his house. Inquiring. cautlously about the cost of copper_ ‘gutters, he was surprised to find that they. would cost him at the rate of more than 50 icents a pound, though the metal sells in ingots around 19 cents. TEa e “Well,” said the smith, “you see the men that work the metal up in the shop get $9 a day. 'The shop adds 10 per cent for the workmen'’s insurance and aims to make at least $1.8 day | aquo descendants on every man. Wken it comes to me, I figure the cost of the materials acd Isbor, and I have to add 10 per cent to the wages to cover insurance cost, too. Then I have to add 10° to. the ;whole thing for ov per cent for the.use of the car and 13 per .cent.for being a any -profit on the job ing, you. might say."—Wall Street Nova Scotia may lay claim to be. ing the earliest colonized land in North | America, with the exception of 8t. Au- gustine, Fla., where the Spanish es- tablishment ‘was made as early as 3565. Port Royal, now the [jttle town of Annapolis, was founded . in 1604, three years before the English settled at Jamestown. = The brave French Dioneers found It necessary to sus pend their colony for three years, but the. settlenient ‘was re-established in 1610 by a group of Acadians. The Acadlans were in almost' con- stant conflict with the glish. The colony fell into the hands of the Eng- h twice, and was each time returned to the French before the English final-. 1y captured it in 1710. The Acadi remained steadfast in their hopes that -French :rule would some day return, | but their hope was destined mever to \be realized. . They. however, persisted i maintaining their {dentity :even agalnst the: English insistence that they abandon their allegiance to thelr mother country. - spent Suixday‘ Paul Haluptzok and tinsmith 'for the re of the Acadians, numbering 300,000, are to be found in Maryland, - Virginia, the & Carolinas, Georgia and Louisiana. When the Acadlans were expelled from the Basin of Monas, 3rand Pre, when they re- ' fused “to taxe the oath of fealty to the Eng!ish sovereign in 1755, many of them escaped to the wilderness and later drifted back to their former homes only. to find them occupled by new settlers from New England states, Sl ead, 5 L. Se I Jjout.of 1t 1s my lv- - Will Appear in Bemidji on 4 - Thursday, July 22 in Afternoon and' Evening Concerts in LIBRARY PARK : Thirty Selected Artists =~ : Many Surprising Novelties EARLING SODAHL and His Six Saxophonists GRAYDON LOWER Euphonium Soloist ROBERT BRUCE Indign Qometist . JULIE BRUER e Soprfino J Under the Auspices and for the Benefit of- RALPH GRACIE POST OF THE AMERICAN LEGION SRR

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