Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 11, 1920, Page 6

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e 00, Someonehas got to tell the tale; < i g - i rusniszang How many. chickens, ducks and pigs, - Miss Eva ‘Aptaker; a young Jewish ! @. E. CARSON, Pres. AR E. fi"Dg‘:"{- Sec, and Mgr. lAlnd Wllflnz sle and 0‘3" rigs. A girl ‘of Gemmantown, Pa., who was £ 506G W HARNWE or ow many horges, steers and cows— brought to this country’ when a small Boelie X Hdie Telophone 928 Binders, mowers, m‘l and plows, - 1 child, is a shining ennynplo of sucoess- y Our depositors are assured prompt and Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second- And other things dbout the place, 8 ful adaptdtionto the American school courteous attention at all times. " elags matter under Act.of Congress of March 3, 1875. Omitted here for want of ‘space. : system. Miss Aptaker received. her {0 e G s T LS TR We tell them where your farm’s located . |early education in the elementary and Th o . s K : 5 cebations And at what price” it's valuated. grammar school of Pennsylvania, at- . e advantage of our experience, in- N attention mald s ine editor, but not We advertise your-shop and benches, - tended. the South Philadelphla High formation, advice and guidance is always __ Hecessarily for publication. ‘Communications for the Your grindstone; tools-and monkey-wrenches—- school for ome year and was three: available and in nearly every instance-is - Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than The acreage your: farm cont..u.m, years a student at the Germantown . correct in dnalysis A Tueaday of each week to. insure publication in the And how it ‘carries off the. rains, High school; from which -she was it ,eurrent lssue. * Preventing any chance of floods - graduated with high howors. She has . ; : That rust the beans and rot the spuds. now been -awarded a scholarship at = . g We state what’s under cultivation— the University of Pennsylvania, being . e 1 And if you’re near a shipping station. the only girl to win that honor among n l na : an PR / How muech in orchard—age of m‘u— % lfo':'|fh slc.hml stu;lenu ;vhn com- : ol . By - And prove your fruit can never freeze. pleted for the twenty scholarships. L Bl ] ¥ Qne vear . O T, e $5.00 How ‘many fcres in .lfl.n w’he‘at— ; : : Bemld]l Minn. Three Month Six Months ... 2.50 ‘And if you're near the county sea! - : 355 > 4 One’ Month - A The moral of this little tale .~ |CONFER POLISH DEGREES : K Three Months ....... 125 > : Pis X 3 = One Weel Is, when you've anything for sale, % ON WILSON AND HOOVER|- - S PHE WEEKLY l;lON%ERs—J‘;edeQgfi-n}“}’;;',‘;fi You shouldn’t hesitate to tell it— oo - : -8d sent po: 3 = i A ; = . avery ‘Thursday 3nd, s Alittle ad will often sellit! The Sevats TEotieiiatcarsity "of | AN e T - * ‘| Warsaw has issued the following: If. you'vé a house or-farm for sale, = " / SHORTAGE OF NEWSPRINT ; ,Suire as much more paper. = ;Lnd the Santé Iadies will OFPFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS SENTIMENTALISM AND MURDER. It is proposed to ask the next legislature to re- " establish the death penalty for murder in Minnesofa. And no wonder. The appalling increase in crimes of violence, only too frequently culminating in homicide, is in no inconsiderable ‘'degree due to the sentimentalism that. abolished capital punishment.”, We are tgo soft in our treatment of criminals.: ‘We prate of the sacredness of human life, forgetting how that sacredness has been violently profaned by ‘the murderer in_cold biood. While the victim of the worst of human passions lies unavenged in his grave, we send his killer to prison, if he can be “caught, and if caught convicted. ‘‘Nominally, the criminal‘goes up for life; actually he "too often is paroléd or pardoned after'a few years of in- adeguate ‘expiation. T & Gt s trigger finger of the highwayman would be Jess facile, if he saw the noose or the chair. ing him. There is no question of that. The marn who murders-in cold blood'is not fit to . “He Haa forfeited the right to live. It is far 4 on_ to ‘maderate the rigors of this law. i ‘lesser ‘crimes, in order that .a’ per- centage of the offenders might “be:'reformed. and made useful citizens. But. murder, premeditated and proved, is a crimé that makes. him who coxjamifi it a standing menace to society which can be re- . moved only with his removql. Only ten states in the Gnion cling to life im- prisonment as the extreme punishment for murder. Others that have tried it have abandoned it and gone back to the death penalty. i In these days when the automobile furnishes mid- night marauders with the means for a speedy get- away, homicidal crimes are increasing rapidly. Only the sternest measures carried out with reason- able promptness and without mercy will serve to abate them. What with the growing difficulty of apprehending the criminals, the uncertainty as to their conviction by our legal machinery, and the probability ‘that -they will escape With. little or mo punishment of an adequate nature; it is high time the fate he deserves should be meted out to the known and captured murderer.—Minneapolis Jour- PRESS COMMENTS—THAT'S ALL (3y EXOCRANGE EDITOR) - | We have too many professional men, and not enough good farmers, says the St. Cloud Journal Press. Our educational system is too top heavy. We are getting too far away from the earth, and are paying a big penalty for our vanity. It is a blessing that our cities are not growing any faster and it would be much better if there was turning of the tide back to the farm.—Stillwater Gazette. - TR =If you are one of those who believe that grav- aled roads will stand up under heavy automobile traffic, take a trip on. the Jefferson, Scenic, Na- tional Parks or any other highway that is traveled “much. That idea will soon be bumped out of you,” says the Wheaton Gazette-Reporter in asking its readings to vote for Amendment No. 1.—Menahga Journal. % —0— Yy St. Cloud authorities are trying to. ascertain who is selling the poisonous moonshine in that city which has already caused one death and put another in the hospital. The authorities in the Granite €ity might come north thirty miles and find con- siderable of the poisonous stuff floating around Dittle Falls.—Little Falls Transcript. m election day 13,500,000 .pencils cost- . 3 s, -\ - ing $675,000, not counting any that Largest Venomous: 8nake. they may chew. MATORITY OF ITALIANS EMIGRATE TO THIS COUNTRY According to figures published by the Emigration Commissariat in Rome 46,802 emigrants left Italian rts during the first three months of shem, sailed for the U mainder to Brazil, Cana America and Uruguay. .Among the| She is Miss — emigrants were 30,695 men 107 women. 247 immigrants, of whom 10,676 ‘were men. RIGHT WHEN THERE'S A ‘Washington; Sept 11.—The Amer- Jand. Five carloads or o /And registration of wo o [ _&ided '8 definite age must be given. Those who ?g&?{hwfl::;g:gfif;ukpinz ;:' COur\tneY Sed & Feed c_o. JEWISH GIRL STUDIES “ | .the Amazonian region in South Amer- Récent discussion as to whether po 1920. 36,836, or over 78 per cent of | women should enter the Jewish min- nited States, 6,- |istry has brought to light the fact| been known to occur within 10 minutes 839 went to Argentine and the re- that one young Cincinnati woman is| after the bite of ‘one of -these reptiles. da, Central |already studying to this end. it lives in dens and holes_ in. the and 16,-|daughter of Prof. David Neumark, a{ goes not climb trees. This snake at- ‘| member of the faculty of the Hebrew | ... o o length of 12 to 15 feet; the During the same three months | Union college of Cincinnati, and is dv § Nowish pink, . ; whi color of its body is yellow D! there arrived in Italy, chiefly from [matriculated at the college in which ith b atterns and tints of pur- the United States and Argentine, 13,-|her father teaches. Miss Neumark| V! rown p is the first girl in history to enter|Ple. college to prepare to become a rabbi. —e LEON - mgggm%g ) ANCELEDF At the bank of the Missouri river, New York, Sept. 11.—Benny Leon one mile west, I questione:ld a tml;;m. « s . 11— - = fcan Forestry association “today an- rad and Eddie Fitzsimmons will not who reé)ilti;d,thgtflllle hla?hzraskne% nu: rounced that because the nineteenth |box at Madison Square Garden this about ng . amendment enfranchising 27,000,000 |month. This women voters is now the law of the|scheduled to be held in the historic| the Missour! show house on Sept. 27, was called off | r¢ 804.000 pounds of |early Thursday by Dan Morgan, man- -«No,” he sald, “we can't do that, but paper more than is ordinayily requir- |ager of Fitzsimmons. -In announcing| we oftenbreak off a plece and suck ed will have to be usged: to print bal- that he had canceled the match,| ¢ like-molasses candy.”—Fred Cope- ' BEMIDJI Morgan explained that he did so be-| 1553 tn the You men will re- | cause he is convinced that his boxer - R SR yso on |tor gy Rl d Subscribe for The Daily Pioneer. IF YOU wm TO RENT. BUY. SELL OR TRADE. ADVERTISE IN PIONEER WANT COLUMN ———— communique: 8 A “BOOMERANG.” N On the first solemn occasion of $ cglpiterr'ing degrees in this regenerat- - ic hews) rs busy mak- - [ed nstitution of learning in Wharsaw, i Cox keeps the»_debt;zoc;ltlc ;e ::,‘:e‘ “mo:fliful" the academic Senate, acting on the ing excuses for his blunders. " AR recommendation of the Department of when he ‘gave out.the. “news” that the rgpqhqu Law and Political Economy, decided had a campaign fund of $15,000,000. - His associates '{x'?fimm"g“fi"yh'd confer’ ‘\;pon President ¢ 2 s s > son “the ‘honorary degree. of -Doc- have been kept busy. trying to fpmul d‘t“ and ;he}y‘ tor-of Laws, in recognition of never- probably will be busy until after election. .Suc to-be-forgotten service: rendered by groundless statements are sure to prove & “boom-- |him to Poland, and a similar. degree A 5 + i rty and ‘will act ‘the upon Herbert' Hoover, .the construc- erang 1°_"t;h"' :cem::?f Iéo)l:aas):ii 4 Hughes’ abtack tor of the great humanitarian work g A same up?n e success o g e and bread-giver to the youth of Po- H upon Wilson four years ago. Even thé democratic !1and. ay, oats, COI‘II, Bal‘ley, Bm friends of Cog are wgndgring why_he kegp! up e e Shoi‘ tS‘ S alt, D P F d it such attacks, when the proof is not available. 7, g Subscribe for The- Daily . Pioneer. 9 all ’ ee” : S fight upon issues and not personal matters W°“_‘d R ol . or ChiCkell Feeds Whether you want a - CARLOAD or just a hundred pounds of O LU S Ve . :#'THOSE HORRID MEN AGAIN. AR INIIC ‘At‘eoxding to a ruling of the state board of elec- mmous BOYS | icials of Indiana, which is . made up of Nearly 700 banks employ stu= , by the way, it is not sufficient for a. woman dents-of Dakota-Businé ollege, t6.tate Her age as “21 plus.” The board has de- | Fargo, “N. D., “because “they are have registered as “21 plus” must register again . fficers a “ or be disqualified from voting in the. Presidential Recently. the First National Bank elections in November. - -| of Kildeer wired fora capable book- ~Too bad; it is unfortunate that those ladies.live keepetand teller. ‘D. Swanson was in'Indiana. That is sufficient ground for a divorce sent. The Citizens National Bank, - from that state.._ Better come over to Minnesota Wyo. got F. H. Champlin where such “piffling” details are not given such ~ Seed, Feed and Potatoes S Phone851 Office at Sunshine Grocery Read The Pioneer Want Ad To fill prospective positions a 1000-New-Pupil Club was formed - | E 0= - “If we ever reach the point where automobiles are run on wind some politicians will outdistance even themselves. i - Join it and “Follow the Suceess- ful.”’. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo;, N. D~ 2 7P 2 The. Bible admonishes us to tell the truth, but wisdom dictates that we be careful who we tell it to. The ability to speak a number of languages is quite commendable; but- to be able to-speak our own correctly is more dependable. ~ i 55 Don’t glue yourself to one spot. The grass can’t - grow under your feet, and the fellow who obstructs’ ** its growth interferes with the 1aw of‘nature. a¢ moving. 4 G owoa LR T " Office, Alfsteol ofice fusniture is | wind By such firms ‘¢s J. P. Mocgen & Co.,Cadillac Motor Car Co., Bush Termiasl Co.; Nationat City Bank, | P N ; When you learn to depend upon yoursélf in all things you will no longer worry over what others may do. ; . clerks of election when you register. All you have to say in a. quiet, dignified manner, is “I' swear I am of legal voting age.” That is plenty, enough and sufficient.—Stillwater Gazette. ‘ gl Not only is Cyrus M. King a good Northern Min- nesota booster and one of the pioneer good roads men, but is a man of exccutive ability and should he be elected it will be Governor King, not merely a rubber ‘stamp for some promoters.—Menahga Journal. 4 . & =0 As to the losing of the personal property tax on automobiles—when we get $32,000 for $6,000 it is a business proposition to‘vote’ for Amendment No. 1.—Cass Lake Times. s 0. The old high cost of living won’t worry Beltrami farmers as long as their land is thickly populated with $300 an acre clover crops.—Baudette Region. —0— 2 An Illinois farmer tore up $5,000 in-currency when his best girl jilted him. That lad doesn’t need a wife—he needs a guardian.—Baudette Region. ~ Prohibition agents in Vermont seized liquor that was hidden in the bustles of two girls. Mercy, how _ . did they discover: it?—Baudette Region. = . y 51 ° - " Allsteel filing cabinets can be. put to : -gether in almost limitless. combinations to Ao meet the exact needs of the one-man busi- - ness as well as the requirements of the big organization. You simply.add more units as your business warrants. " Saves Valuable Space Allsteel filing cabinets save 15 to 259 floor, space over wood cabinets, and have greater capac- ity. Allsteel is fire-resistant, warp-proof, wear:) . proof, rodent-proof, dust-proof and everlasting. ’ ] Come in and examine the Allsteel filing units. Look at desks, safes, counter height files and other el units of Allsteel office furniture, the equipment J that belongs with success.) : g —— Those Bemidji lads are not a bad gang when you Girls, you who are 21 years of age and then some, * are not required to give your age to the judges and \ get to know them, are they 2—Baudette ngion. The .bush ‘master is the largest known venomous snake. It inhabits BECO. RABBI | ica. Its teeth and polson apparatus i NE . resemble those of a rattlesnake, and the fangs are very large. Death has | Martha Neumark, | ground, fréquenting river banks and No Place to Boil 1t Then. whether it was true that they drank i fiver water, which was olling by us like a tidal wave of sand. match, which was PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE v : Phone 799-] - - - MINNESOTA mpanion.

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