Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 15, 1920, Page 7

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‘(Cont{nued from Page 1) 10) ission and likely will have on the ground. 4 £The program to be followed atzthe “will'probably-be, hearing re- (s of .various’ corpmissions-author- “by the council of the League to n gate international J( problems; scussion and adoption rules and mination of credentials of dele- atmission of states -not men- THCovénant;‘appointment and r DEéd By the-League: council to car- T outiprovisions of the peace treaty; di ot the retation between the sdapci] and theraccembly; Teport of _Sjt-Fric Drummopd on the work of tHe gecretariat; discussion and aena.e ofithe. Root-Phillmore “world court; afid’a score of other important.ques- . tipns-relating-to-questions of -health, filance;-alcohol, tdaffic in women and clijfldren ‘and the like. 4 90t the'nations atténding the Gen- eva assembly meeting, eighteen, in: chifftig the five dominions of 'the British -group, -derivéd their- memb-| ership in the League automatically | thru the coming-into effect of the| Treaty of Versailles, January 10, 1920.:Eight other countries. ratified the-pact later and are classed as 9"- ter members, Thirteen nations, meut- yfitatibn . o ‘certain ‘commissions | Potatoes, -per-owt. - I'CASH MARKET QUOTATIONS. Red Clover, médium, I Wheat, hard .’ Wheat, soft Rye, bu. . ! mall lots . . Potatoes, car load lots Cabbage, cwt . ..~ Onions, dry . ‘Beais, ewt . Butterfat . Eggs, fresh, doz MINNEAPOLIS CASH GRAIN. At close of business November 15: Low ‘High {No. 1 Northern Dark No. 3 White Oats’.. Choice_ Barley- rais in the World ‘War, were invited |No. 2 Rye. toibecome members of the League and |Flax have accepted and already been taken into membership. ‘China, alone, detives her member- ship by being a signatory to the s uea- ty.of St. Germalin. ‘Eleven other states have-applied for membership, some of them saving only de facto governments. In ad- ditlon it is believed any, Aus- Bulgarie -and ‘Hungary will e ‘attempts ‘to ‘gain admission to full fellowship jamong the nations as;exemplified in the League. ‘“The only gations that will not be represented at ‘the first meeting of thp assembly, eithex officially or semi- o;:l;-l.lly. are the United States of Aericd; -Mexico, Turkey and Rus- ‘he assembly will be called to ord- egjat 11 o’clock by M. Paul Hymans of Helgium. Later a permanent pre- Il‘pu{ will ‘be elected for the period £”Yhe conference. hce Information is that ‘m"o! "days ‘will be require/;‘i mdsely to hear'the reports of the va- ’commisgions whioh have been ized by the council to inves- te international questions. Dele-{ will be quartbred at Geneva's| ajn--hotels, and their office work will be done in'the League’s new cap- ital, recently the National Hotel. | which was acquired by ‘8ir Eric to tdke care of the offices of the secre- tariat and commissions. | ‘Among the reports to be heard of} commissions named under. provisions | of ‘the treaty are: Appointment of| three-members of the Saar Valley| boundary commission; the Saar Val- ley governing commission; ‘Appoint- Ment of the high commissioner of Dinfzig and approval of the constity- tion of the Free City; responsibilities of the league arising out of the dis- tribution of mandates and the en- fotcement ‘of * article . XXII«(man- dates) ; appointment of Dr. Fridjof Nansen, -arctic - explorer, to investj- gate fion of ex-enemv nri oners from Russia and Germany to; their respective homes; the Polish minority treaty; the resowtion re- garding the admission of Switzerland; . the first and second budgets of the league; relief in Central Europe and methods of .combatting typhus; re- V}JGETAB,LES $1.00-$1.10 $1.10-81.28 $1.60-82.00 $1.50-82.00 $6-37 60c Cow:Rides, Ne. 1, Ib. . \Bialrwides, No. 1,71 Kipp hidgs, No. 1,1 Calf skins, No. 1, Ib. Dpacons, each . .. 60c ' Horse: hides, large ..... SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVE STOCK. Caj le;-Rnceipts. 20,000; market, fully‘25¢c/lower. ‘Hogs—Receipts, 95,000; market strong to- 16¢ higher, closing weak; top, $12:35; bulk of sales, $12.10@ 12.20. Sheep—Receipts, 20,000; market, weak to 26c lower. - FOOTBALL-RESULTS. State. Hamline 10, Carleton 6. Macalester 7, St. Thomas 6. St. Cloud 13, Winona 7. Rochester 14, Mankato - . West. Towa 23, Minnesota 7. 1. Wisconsin 14, Illinois 9. Michigan 14, Chicago 0. Northwestern 14, Perdue 0. Notre Dame 13, Indiapa 10. Nebraska 20, Kansas - 20. Montaga 28, Montana St tate 0. Missauri 14, 'Washington 10. Oberlin ‘23, Case 0. Kenyon 17, Western Reserve 14. Marietta 88, Cincinnati: Utah Aggies 21, Montana Mines 0. Drake 17, Creighton 0. Detroit 29, West Virginia Wes- leyan 0. U..0. Ames 17, Kansas Aggies 0. Colorado 7, Colorado ines 0. St. Ambrose 27, Campion 7. Valparaiso 14, Morningside 0. Grinnell 81, Sim 0. pson Miami 14, Mount Union 0. . East.. Princeton 20, Yale ‘0. Harvard 27, Brown 0. — Pittsburgh 7, W. and J. Dartmouth 34, Pennsylvania 7. . 0. Navy, 63, South Carolina 0. Army-90, ‘Bowdoin ‘0. Cornell 14, Columbia 7. Boston 37,:Tufts 0. Andoveri8, Exeter 3. Holy Cross 36, Colby 0. Fordham 40, Washington 0. Union 20, Hobart 7. New Hampshire 47, Maine 7. Yale Freshmen 28, Hatvard Fresh- men 3. Johns Hopkins-41, St. John 0. Bucknell 45, Gettysburg 0. ARMISTICE ANNIVERSARY The ' celebration of Armistice day at Kelliher, under the auspices of the Oscar Ahlberg Post, was a splendid success in spite of unfavorable weath- er conditions, Promptly at 2:30 the members of fhe American Legion as- sembled at the school house where the children joined in the parade thru town. -After the parade the members of' the post took about twenty min- utes drill, under the command of Sec- ond Lieutenant Krogseng, The school children “were then escorted 'to the theatre where ‘a + five__reel rpicture “Pershiug’s Crusaders,” W. glso a comedy. The pictul to. any-student of any school in viclnity ‘of Kelliher. /1n the evening the pictures were again shown, with asmall admission charge, for the benefit of ‘the post. The evening program includéd also two boxing contests and a wrestling match.’ The first boxing match was between Carl Peterson and Jorgen Linnem,- and second between Hub- bard and Lawson. The .wrestling match was betyeen Barkley and Ma- guire. 'The ‘réferée in all the con- tests was George Moore. The even- ing program was thoroughly. enjoyed by all and ap audience of more than 200 showed their'interest and appre- ciation. After the entertainment, both thestreatre and the city were opeped for dancing. Music was fur- ishéd by -the “Blackduck orchestra. i was free mitted free, and -were the honored guests of the evening. " ON FIRST SHOT TODAY Soon after daybreak this mornipg Harry "Slough, 1213 Minnesota ave- nue, ventured forth to his “old hunt- ing grounds” on his sousin’s: farm labout nine miles south of Bemidjl in_ Hubbard county .in search for his shown.j ‘the thi Ex-service men in uniform were ad-| % /THE'BEMIDJ1! DAILY’ PIONEER - e e = . (fContinued from i’nge 1) William. ' ‘Sylvia day,”that” maid of honor.to the queen. music paniol field, return: to find her. the plough“fiéld and half promise to meet them at the stile on their way home from' work. g Sylyia_and Betty refurn, in gach others clothes. Betty fools DeLacey and fools William. De- Lacey and Betty sets forth to stroll through the woods and lanes, and weed the potato: Robin soungs patch. i the-dinner horn, and to spend the noonday hour. g Act 1L Toward“the close of the afternoon the haymakers rest:from their toil and ‘stroll. to “and-from the cool of the day. The farmers' daughters set forth on ‘their walk to the stile. ™ Sylvia, worn out with' her experi- ences;of the afternoon, returns to the field, and Betty rushes in, having run away from DeLacey and a bull. Each girl _declares that hereafter she will be ‘¢ontent_with her own lot and will not envy the other.. They retire to change s and to set off in search of "the'farmer and poet. Un¢ Sylvia carried over the brook by the farmer,and the Lady Araminta saw DeLacey and--Betty walking.arm’ in arm, -and this ‘mews: is imparted to Prince, Tobbytum, who -resolves to expose the Lady;Sylvia that night be- fore the assembled court. William, accompanied by the farm- ers’ -daughters and ;heafarm lads, is searching for Bett{ and*he runs into De Lacey, who is looking for Sylvia. The two men are-about to come to blows when Sylvia'and Betty separate em. The Ladies Arabella and Araminta, thinking~it -possible" they -may have been mistaken, ask the p?ce not to mention whay they havé told him. Prince Tabbytum tries to make mis- chief but is’foi A song to the hatvest moon, Tising over. the tree tops, ends the evéning and all - went. their way.homeward. P, i Cast of Characters. -Sir Bertram deLacey..:Robert Naylor Prince Tobbytum.. ictor Jahr William ohn . Cahill Robin . Svlvia Betty Arusvella Araminta . Poll Molly. .. Dolly . ‘Winnipeg, {Manitoba.—Speaking before the » Manitoba Horticultural Society, Professor 'N. E. Hangen of the South. Dakota Agricultural Col- erite Donovan i Agnes Skinvik Vera Packard llen Crothers Alma Elmquist -Elsie Shannon Utopta of agricultural, 'horticultural and livestock’ possibilities. Years of investigation; he claims, have shown him fruits ¢an be grown within the Arctic -¢iréle, {@ifalfa produced-suc- cessfally in a climate where the tem* verature descends to 91 degrees be- low zero, and sheep afid cattle thrive in' the snow and mature free from suggests that, ‘as they each envy the other her lot, they exchange places for the rg!t of tge t ‘masquerades ‘as the farmer’s mm{:flmd Betty a;; the: etty ?fl_s of a flower called “Cupid’s Eye,” hich: blind ‘the<peet and the farmer to the fdet that such'ari exchange has d ithe two ' girls set flower and Betty's com- who had left her in the hay- .| fie They meet the ‘farm' lads-on ‘their way home' to, ‘| ning. Mies -Amm?;‘s‘ Eufitscw&e dressell | Misses Agnes and Lillian /Parker, Bll- William drags-Sylvia off to help him) the haymakers return to the hay field fortunatgly, the 'Lady Arabella saw e leige, landéd the “Arctic north as a|° MONDAY. EVENING, NOVEMBER ekt T John R. Dalton, fourteen year old son of ‘Mr.’and Mrs..J. A. Dalton; was brought home from St. Anthony’s hospital yesterday, after being <on- fined ‘there :for “the past- six ’wesks with a siege of- typhold fever. i4e is mow out of danger and getting<on very -nicely. - .~ ke Al - MISS ATTRIDGE ENTERTAINS IN HONOR OF HER BROTHER - Miss Florence Attrldsyentert§; 'l ed:a-party ‘of friends at’ her hom Nymore Saturday: evening :‘in o ‘plimen{ to-her brother, Thomas at: tridge, ‘who is home from ‘the Gregt Lakes training station on’a furlongh. Luiich was: served ;after’ a:socigl: e Hai Ewanmn’,\‘Dflrotunyole. Dorothy Masferson, Myrtle McCullough, Angia Knutson, Hazel Anderson, Elsie ] ‘35 ick. /Martha: ‘Mickelson, Alma~, quist,-Mary-Kerschbaum, Ellen Ohftr- gren,.and -Lester 'Kiehl, Lloyd B} Justine Peterson, Bill Holiddy, Jo Swanson, Elmer Wold, Joe -Steje, | Clarence Bly, ‘Reuben Olson, Leonard Alton, Jefferson Masterson, Foster Taylor. % | ROOT CELLAR" WILL "HOLD. g | SEVEN THOUSAND BUSHELS | J. R. Pogue %has just completed .a large modern root cellar on-his:farm. The cellar is 27x52 feet, double con- crete walls surround it and it is weather proof in every respect. It is built in the side of a bank in such ‘a manner that a chute carries the potatoes from the cellar to wagons bg gravity ‘and' an opéning is provid- in; N be dumped “into -the lal;xe ‘bing.. On top of the“cellar beside] the driveway' there is a'garage, granary and shop, making it one of the most modern thousand bushels-and thig la%ge quan- tity can be stored and removed with \the least possible handling. failures among the soldier-settlers in Central “British Columbia has been very low, being only five per c¢nt out of the total of 1,237 returned men | who took land upder the schgme of the " Soldiers’: Settlement Board. tliis small number, wounds and in- juries made some physically unfit to succeed. “In the Vancouver ar "fi' ! dier settler§ have 7,200 head-of o ock, 556,000 head of poultry,-and oc- cupy 65,000 acres of Jand. ‘More than. one fourtlt of this land has been clear-| ed and.a great deal.cultivated. . Toj date the settlers have / paid back $600,000 of the moneys advanced by the Government to assist them. Can.—M. Y. Lim Saskatoon, Sask., the Chinese Avia- |Om, a graduate of ta¥ned the sérvice of a Canadian me- chande from the government school |} 7 | , the drivéway on'itop n; the |’ cellar ‘through which potatoes” may|: and useful “root “cellar ini'this part| . of the state. “The capacity'is seven|: Victorla, B. C.—The percentage of [ ot § tion school mear this place, 'has ob-|3 The -bodies of Donaid .and"’ Ray Dally, sons: of: Mr. and ‘Mr: . M. Dally, of Laporte, who were drowned in’ Hart lake, east of Guthrie a‘ week ago iast Saturday, were recovered ‘by a searching party of about thirty rsons. Axes ‘were used to cut through the ice and the bodies wes where’ the canoe -was- found. bodies: were about. fifteen feet apart and in about five feet of Wwater when found.. .No. injuries were found on gither body, according to reports: The. bodies were taken to:Laporte immediately. ~The funeral will ftake place tomorrow- afterngon at 2:30 at to.get started again. yvhat he orderg for you. Z 217 Thivd Street Phone 34 g Vesterday afternoon about. 6 o’clock| finally: located -2 ‘short distance from |: FOR NT—Three-room house 1ights ‘and wired for Phop 649-W. i LOST—Hub ' caf FEIGHTY AORES well :lmproved: clay Leave at' Pioneer. - farm: Can.give possession At onge. $3,200.. \Migh & or €any . terma.. n,-the dgndmen. ANTED—Young. man 8% bookkeeper * . and . -&tenol Good prospects. - for -adyan Address “A” care Ploneer..3d. Prig 1 FOR SALE—For — Barke class condition; Wll%y" Phone 920 When a friend offers you a prescription that “worked fine’” for him—don’t take it. } That is, be nice about'it in' refusing. You don’t want to hurt his feglings. But here’s Ahe point: If that prescrip tion worked fine—FOR HIM—it means ‘that the doctor found what. the trouble was and knéw just what would help nature In ;your case, the proportions- mizhf have to be changqd a lot—even something gntx’rely. different—to help 'you any. Don’t ask a friend. - Ask _a doctor. Our part is to see that you get exactly ' ' LEATHER STORE - K. Brown, Manager. : Third Street iy Heavy ‘ana Light “Har- + nesses and collars. - e — ' Trunks, Suit Cases “and. Fancy, ‘Traveling Bags. . - Halters, Harness - Parts and Leather Extras. ! at Camp Borden and will return to hina to open a school and operate a “joy-ride gircus.”_ He will also ex- ploit ‘he possibilities of commercial aviation' in his -own country. Medicirfes; -Gall Cure, Wool Fat. e Mitéens, .\Glm;'es;. Oils and Greases ‘of : iand Horse' Blanke "Poultry and Stock Fobds, {Harnesses Oiled. all \ 'kinds. : Repairing promptly done;’ @ hat place. S : f ‘ - m- ¥ : “Here’s a Prescription that Did the Workifor Me:” EZ Dickinson 7, Haverford Ambherst 14, Trinity 0. Williams 50, Wesleyan 41. Swarthmore 62, Delaware 0. Bates 21."New:York-U. 18. F. and M. 9, Ursinus 7. Soutf. West Virginia 17, Rutgers 0. Virginia 7, Vanderbilt 7. Auburn 77, Washington and Lee 0. Georgie Tech. 35, Georgetown 6. Center 49, Kentucky State 0. Pacific. Washington State /28, Oregon Ag- os 0. Oregon 17, Washington 0. FARMERS? CLUB HOLDS . DINNER AT CARR LAKE (Continued frém ‘Page One.) “annual deer.” = ilis search’was not in vain for about eight o’clock “he epottéd Bir Buck and without waste of time'and bullets made a bulls-eye on the first shot. The happy hunter, proud of the early success, reported at The -Pioneer office at 10 o'clock, | the first man to report success this season, in fact the first to report at all. The four-pronged buck, which was still warm at the time it was| brought 40 Bemidji, weighs about | two hundred fifty pounds. Big game hunting season opened this morning and from all reports the exceptionally large number of hunts- men this year will-find that it is a “big game” if each expects to have | | success. 'Somewhere in the woods of Northern Minnesota fifty thousand bunters ire supposed ‘to ‘be stalking tbe trail, A light snowfall 'yester- day undoubtedly aided in tracking. \WILL ASK ADDITIONAL | ‘iOUOR TRAFFIC.COPS (By United Press) Paul, Nov. 16.—Paul Keller, port on the plebiscite in Eupen and Malmedy. disease. He urged the transplanta- ticn of Siberian difalfa to Canada, prophesying -a yleld -eight timese greater in rich Canadian soil, and a crossing of ‘Canadian sheep with the hardier Biberian breeds. o SUBSCRIBE FOR TH. . DAILY iProbably one of the most ®icklish | problems the aAssembly will be called | oh to settlejs-likely to be proposed | oo the league by Peru, Chili and Bolivia. ' It is the Tacno-Arica boun- dary controvi Both Peruvians and Bolivians have made known their | intention of ‘submitting the question’ to the league for settlement. It is expected Chili will acquiesce. Since the seventies, the question of who owns Tacna-Arica has worried statesmen of South America. More gi than once has war threatened, and | in fact Chili actually declared war ont Peru and in the treaty of Ancon| gained: possession of ' the disputed province. A plebiscite was set for ten years later (1883), byt for sev- | eral reasons: the will of the -inhal tants was never allowed to be ex- pressed. i - Shved "on many otcasions but & [{urmers. M. Barker asked that the 7 i i i armers atten e association elec- fah mo.iiplomatic -relations Sare next Wednesday following the intait ili, | tion ;I;!q’t:ul:::d beb::w::nw:’:ru andzOhll, nsual civic and comrmerce ‘dinner-and United ~Of most interest to the take ‘at"that time the vital ‘interest . States, perhaps, in view of the failure they sRould in their fair and other i of that nation to enter the I county association business. St. S T ittitade towasd thy| | Bemidji'"invitation to the farmers, Fedoral prohibition _enforcement Raot-Phi i to attend 'a‘ banquet- held in theirjagent .in Minnesota, the Dakotas, nfiln.ml,l:: mp:::;n;t;o: nclof:,:fit:: {honor on Decemiber 4:at the civic and| Iowa and -Nebraska, and J. C. Steen- of ‘world jurists’ under guidance of |Sommerce -rooms -was extended . by | erson, - Minnesota : state supervisor, hu Root, former secretary of state | Mr. - Barker. This was gladly ac-|want. to secure additional - help to ufider: President Roosevelt. cepted. “stop-the flow of liquor thru-Minne- “Itiasmuch as several European na- W. L. Brooks ‘discussed a milk] sota over the central West.” The| i} tiétis are opposed to the unlimited |tester’for: the: Carr Lake school. It[pair mre enroute to Washington_to, powers of the court, as the United |developed:that (there -is ore -at thetell” federal ‘prohibition "heads that States. is.fo the unqualified Article school “but ‘sot"in ‘use. ‘Mr, ‘Brooks whiskey is taking such a place in X 'of .thei covenant, considerable' de- sbehialf 1of ' the “Northern Minnesota and North Dakota that it xpected before the court’s National ‘bahk :a ‘prize’ of ten dollars is impossible to keep apace with it to the bey or _‘m‘bfimu milk sam- without additional forces. constitution is: finally approved. A A : t the court will certainly be|Ples'to:school to be tested and reach- X 4 e Hacumion of'p ROBBERS MAKE: GETAWAY established. is ‘asstired b tion. of 1 ; “ the’ league council in" -{ip ving of | '3‘“’1’”‘ of ‘prpblems of milk S the plan’ for formulation 'of a perma. |Pfoductink then -became general 'and : hewt courts of -international -justice, {Anally brought out other features to I‘Ihkeh!-m be discusséd more fully. in a later "(By United Press.) Oniaha, ' Neb., Nov. 15.—Robbeni ¥ bokrded the fast Trans-continental| ted questions are what| . * foffi 1t 'will take and to what extent”“‘:\"“‘e’i :{hh: }2:;"‘;:&" to- the ‘Milk ted patsenger train here last night and esca . with ten registered mail bags | ot will “ad i 5 o hgn G/ Ty ecmon Producers association-were appoin with approximately $20,000. i Fons the meeting: was adjournéd. Winnipeg, Manitoba, — In 1919, | 725 one of the most interes Henry L. Wood, of this city, esti-| mates that the robbery has been car- $8 Manitoba experted “153 “carloads of | oy fruitful sessions ever “held by ' th butter to the United States and Eu-|up ‘and will undoubtedly, have' far- ried out by strangers, three men of i whom are believed to be ‘in hiding § ‘Tope, according to the repert of u‘e,renching influence on the “prosperity = N Ottawa, OHMO-;AECONilg to'alin 1 Omaha. No arrests have been| il ~GUARANTEED H IN cOLDEST i} WEATHER B ~ IONEER| Here is Comfort” Guaranesd—yoir whole house (every room) warm a8 you want it in coldest weather. Furnace you 'get a written Money- back Guarantee that it must “heat your home to 70 degrees'in ‘coldéit weather.” ] - CaloriC engineers made pip¢lesy heating:a slicoes gmtheir uneq‘::alled serv;:‘ in determining correct installation is the most factory heating. . d ¥ Saves 3§ to 34 the fuel. 'Now heating over 100",%00 homes more coinfortably Jand:iat Jess cost than they were ever heated before. For old 'or dew homes. 'No expensive in- stallation. No 'plumbing—no “pipes ‘to freeze. Made by largest manufacturer of warm-air furnaces in world. ‘Decide riow for CaloriC Guaranleed Comfort this winter. ¢ .. «Cotne to bur store and let us show you this wonderful heating system. : * 'HARDWARE COMPANY L 3 ' BARKER DRUG & . JEWELRY STORE e | | | Manitoba department of ‘agriculture. |2 sy coion : report from the bureau of! made. : | kis is a very. 504 show in' vie 8t the fact t Munitoba imported | there ‘were, in the nionth of Qetober, - . more - than 25,000;000 -.pounds of BB carloads in 1912. The increase is B ennatis, 20000000 pounds| THE PIONEER WANT ADS| due to the finprovement in the butter - mdde in .this province and educa- of cheese and -13,000,000 ‘dozens of eggs in storage in Camade. BRING RESULTS SN tidnal campaigns among creameries and butter makers.

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