Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 11, 1920, Page 4

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BEMIDJIDAILYPIONEER ~ [Foowomoums o o : PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNQON EXCEPT SUNDAY . THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. (By Unlted Press) . San Antonio, Oct. 11.—The female | of the specie is far more deadly—and ddring—than the male—especially in the ol’ swimmin’ hole. Of the thirty- three rescues made this season at San Antonio’s community swimming ‘hole, - twenty-seven Wefe Women, ac- cording-to Anton Curreon, life saver. [}~ ~ ‘Women are harder to save than men, - Wool Batting- - The Bemidji Woolen: Mills’ are now "manufacturing wool batting . FOR QUILTS E. H. DENU, Sec. and Mgr. E. CARSON, President J. D. WINTER, City Editor W. HARNWELL, Editor - T i T a package ) before the war ‘st the postoffice ‘at’Bemidji, l!inxiesoh,:u ficondwh\m Puttét,‘ ; e o i1 under Act of’ Cangress of March 3, 1879. 2 2 . ! - oz ' - . o % . G - :H = = fi-}b W 3 ..t’., T - v“i"‘l'l:'g:;::ig;' to lgrab mi»a’lo;x;d‘. fig: ’ 3nd can fin pr}?erslfil,‘omptly' Th,eyalsg_i k ion” paid t it e nd stra me,” he said.. . | e attantion Baid e ey ot publication. - GemmumIca:|{ now.T treat ‘m rough, ETabbing them. o custom work, carding wool batting and. . tRona:for the. Weekly Pioneer.must Fékich this offic |y ghe batr and holding them at arm's | .- spinning: rolls. role ~for 3 i L 7 4 " Yength Curreon_bas. o e . e of sach week to insure publication i the' current iss ko satety ‘of swimmers, ‘Which heH{— - - L P.BATCH OR.... says: would do away with pulmotors, : i $ig lfl:e g?arcu and first aid treatment. It ‘ \ Phone 675 s pac 8ix Months g One Year head F ORI S I Y - ; . ot e " “Three Months 50, G5y, Mositi 5| SUBSCRIBE FOR THE- d 11 m i O Vet 35 Threo Months DAILY PIONEER \ ur g the war S ! ———.—.——_==m—-_=-—<® _ , “The P Y and ‘ & AT ITS BEST Cream . THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, published every Thursday #nd sent postage paid to any address for, in advance, $2.00. of Nut The strongest com- lintent ever paid to | cotts Emulsion! is the vain attempts at I . i, OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS » Jake Preus is advocating co-operation and ‘organization among the farmers. He even goes so far as to admit that the ‘Nonpartisan league is a gopd thing, but admits also that Town- ~~ley ig'the one bad feature. There is no question about Jake’s : “Bthtement being true and it is making more friends among th"e ! . . fapiiers for him than anything else. He‘is most sincere in his ; | appeal for -organization' among: the farmers and suggests a plan, which should appeal to th The, felloy,who is opposed 10 farmers arganizing is unpopular; not only among the farm- ers,-but among the merchants. "Of course the farmers should organize. - It is a pity that they have nét done so ‘years: ago. I the Nonpartisan league is the kin dof organization they|" want, and the kind of organization that will benefit them most, . gnd i8 the kind of organization that will do the most good for the county, state and nation, then by all means shoudl this or- ganization be continued, BUT it cannot succeed, it cannot ac- __ gomplish the most good for either the farmer or businéss man ynder the present leadership. Organization members should - k‘vérflle right to say who shall be their leader and should be given a voice in choosing him, Men who have heard Jake & Preus’ plea for co-operation, yes, nponpartisan league members, 4 have heartily” endorsed his plan and have declared that he has won the esteem & s ug'ginfld ‘be supported. - They know he is.sincere. They 'know ’ of our fellow | ; at he is not opposed to the league, and they believe that what|" & townsmen. Each ik he says about the extreme; radical element running the league detail is in - the et frue. The real farmers, our best citizens, members of the hands of a capable | : league, are anxious to rid the league of the pestering, kankerous staff trained to fi*'d@vocating extremist,’as much as anyone else, and the thing their special call- %o do-is to work with the farmer in his effort to bring this about.}. ing.’ i Every business man, every true American citizen, should lend aj, - helping hand in this big job, and we believe that the time will AR on be here when this fact will have been realized. ; ¥ o i " “7/'Shooting partridge seems to be the popular sport these ..days.. Guess it must be more exciting to violate the game laws 17 thet to wait until the season: opens. { —0- e When you get your mail at the postoffice Siinday evenings, suggest that you take a_flash light or Iantern with' you. = NOW : .'The, Flavor Lasts ’ LSO;‘DOQSJDB Price! imitation. - Those who take cod-liver oil at its best, take - Scott’s Emulsio Beott & Bowne, Bloomfield 2014 THE meritorious quality of gour arrangements and business courtesy Hurry! Wheat Cak'eé ' for Breakfast! - 0 215 A NI EE them, stacked high, tdpped with a big pieco of deiiciovs ’ s v of 1 !Sa ’% T 1 / o Lb A Cream of Nut! Who could regist ther.! ‘Crecm Nut rL has that wonderful {lavor thet tells of duiry churning, rich \ - D o U B L E M ' N .. pastenfjzed milk combiried with oil prossed from the creamy p ' 1..; whita meat of cocoanuts.; Have you tried it ye:? IG GUM | , e e e . Fricdman'c Oak Grove Oléomargerifie—of equally high quality A '/g" O EDDE RAINT ’ Zis recommended to thoso who prefer the unimal product. Z P o EBMAN MEG. CO., C’mm;n Whelesale Cictributor L Brotodbt WL L. 1o Dt Blids - The, Eizion Mercantile Co. 1 - 1 + Mercan {70 CHICAGO Superior Wis. ai The Ponor Wal A (| The Gasolirie- s‘z’_tkfi_n_gan_uif_}:fi(ciiANG", eorror ||| ff T I S\ Bk Poiens 1 1910 and Now - JN 1910 there \}vgx;é.apfiroximately 400 thousand cars in the United States.. = | o 3 el i iy - Atchison Globe Sights. ‘The.modern girl doesn’t blush enough. i ~A41til_i¢y woman can save twice as much as a stingy man. L5 Criticism as as easy as rolling down hill, and it gets you to the same +" place; mud at the bottom. . ‘When-a man reaches the age of forty years, he begins to wonder if He is ‘still regarded as a “promising young man.” . wT% The woman who claims to have more sense than her husband may be ql‘hc.lhollt it and still have nothing to boast of. "~ An Atchison man has four very nice grown sons. Asked how he reared ghem: lo‘xle]_l he replied: “I never nagged them—but oncd in a while I - gaised hell With them.” Perhaps a little such hell-raising is what a lot -of ~ «yyorthless, loafing, lounging boys and young men need. To operate these cars there was available a gasoline production of 750 million gal- lons, or, approximately, 1875 gallons per car. ' “ In 1919 there were more than 7 million cars and trucks operating in the United States, i e Man Iy an Encyclopedia. ’ ~~ A man is the whole encyclopedia of facts. The creation of a thousand forésts i in”one acorn, and Egypt, Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain, America lie folded already in the first man.—Emerson. 5 hd g : e e Overheard at .a Small: Town-Ball Game. I Umpire—Boy, that's' certain]y*sonie tear you ‘ghveiyour ‘pants when you slid. P . 4 ~Casey ‘coloud)—Sulh is; n?ighty near havin’ to call this game off on 5 'cgmnfi darkness.—Exchange. iid + To supply these ‘engines there was available, : uneordingto Bureau of Mines Report, 3 billion, ¢ 957 million gallons of gasoline, or, approximately, 565 gallons per car. % ¢ In:neither case has.consideration been given to the demand of tractors, stationary gas engines, or tire gasoline required by the ar¢s and indus- ..tries. Nor havé we considered the large volume of this product shipped ‘abroad annually. R, 3 A resident of Cilicia wrote to his cousin in Constantinople inviting him .%o '‘come and join him in business. ‘Hitherto,” he said, “I have had two sdrious competitors, my father and my brother, but there has been a mas- ssore of our people, and, by the grace of God, they were both killed.” ~—London Morning Post. 1 | Money-Back Shot-Shells . You can fiet your money back for The Black Shells We make exactly the mor any reason at all, you don’t gi::e tham. . J‘;xnsl!i same guarangee with ‘bring back the unused part of the box, and we wi - refund to you, without. question; the price of the @ carmRmaEs whole box. : e o .| There isjno22 Lone ‘The Black Shells have reached o high™a state of | Rife cartidgehas 2= pérfection in waterproofing, in spéed, in power, and | S5 SIS ,m!uniftoeremity-,—-t}mt _we can make Athu_unlminted 2 N.R.A, Long Rl ; by e 1 P ~ is 50 more ‘yards of ac- " \$mokelessand Black Powders’ curacy than has hitherto been possible with 22 rim-fire amunition. Try The Blick Shells, if you don’t know them. You can | _Salid bulee fortarget get your pet load for every kind of shooting, in smokeless oF | F* OW-POLRE black powders. UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE COMPANY, New York, Manufacturers Come in and get a copy of The U. S, Game Law Book —FREE. A. B. Palmer, Bemidji, Minn. The above figures are presented so that you may visualize one of the’ problems the petroleum industry has been called upon to solve in the - past decade, Count that day lost whose low, descending sun, Leaves “Babe” Ruth without one more home run. . —DMinneapolis Tribune. In 1910 the Standard;Oil Company . (Indiana) marketed about 20 percent of the gasoline out- put yf the United States, or approximately 150 million - galions. In 1919 this Company sold about 640 million gallons of gasoline, or about 17 percent of tbe total for that year. i g —_— ... How would a nation-wide tag day do to help out the democratic cam- pul.n fund? Chances on Thanksgiving turkeys would be too late.—Ex. Y O—— ' SIS - Fast. § ) 2 A Chicago meeting of_busiess ;men “gonfidéntly predicted shat good e flq are thead.. The trouble isithat they’ wg{kupi':o far:ahead that & average man can’t catch up with them.—Ex. N Ithas been the task of ‘the 7 men who manage _ the affairs of the Standard Oil Company (Indi- ana) for the 5124 stockiaolders,; not one of whom ~ --.owns as much as 10 percent cif the total, to ex- e vdnd the organization not orily to keep. pace -#with, but to keep ahead of the \extraordinary and ————— 3 To the Day! The day will come when employer and employee will sit down together [y & friendly debate and iron out their troubles and differences in a friendly #pitit. Then will disappear the unrest and the ill-feeling which exists today g_yuq capital and labor.—Bay City Times-Tribune. y ———— - Exit. the Ladies’ Cage. B - The First National bark is taking the Nineteenth amendment literally. ~ .+ Xt hap-abolished the ladies’ cage, which was instituted to spare the gentler b ::meu'a sex from whiting in line with the men at the general cages. , Now, however, they are all for equality, both ways, the ladies must use the ?aul cages, and women tellers have also been introduced to wait upon 1 D .7 How. well they have succeed:¢! is- illustrated - clearly by the fact that in the :10-year petiod above mentioned, the Standard® Oil Conrpany (Istdiana) has taken a leading part, in increasing -gasoline production 440 percent,, whzile crude ¢il production increased only 94 pe rcent. ; Standard Oil Cdlnpany ‘ Cost no more. , Ask for' men.. But it must be admitted the arrangement is quite agreeable to circular C-93. concerned. The ladies are quite content to be treated as fellow-men. —Los ‘Angeles Times. —a—— 1 v In'a Nutshell. . *" “Constitution or Covenant?” asks Senator Hiram Johnson. Bully| " ’}opn. Answer due November 2.—New York Telegram. ———— & 9 The Downward Pathia Britain. : . s 3es . ‘ L Undiene) 1 i Al g T e g s Charles E', Battles, Bemidji, Minn. 910 So. Michigan Ave., -Chicago * see how one thing leads to another. You began by cursing \your Maker, — = = Y oo wity - il and you end by throwing a stone'at a hen.”—London Daily Chronicle. |

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