Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 10, 1920, Page 6

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~BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER E. H. DENU, J. D. WINTER, City Editor :. E. CARSON, President % HARNWELL, Editdr TTU T Telephone 922 Entered af: the postoffice at' Bemidji, Minnesota, as second-class matter, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. | | i No attention paid to anonymous con‘trihlltiona. ‘Writer’s name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communica- tions for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office nat later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issge. e S e SUBSCRIPTION RATES .$6.00 By Carrier Three Mont] - One, Month One Week THE WEEKLY PLONEER—Twelve pages, published every Thursday and serit postage pgid to any address for, in advance, $2.00. OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS Six Months Three Months The fact that those who owe us.most on subscription are the slowest to respond to our notice to square up indicates that we should have pursued the strictly eash in advance policy from the beginning. We hope that all ge. around to jt before January 1, and thereafter there can be no dispute about | how much you owé and no need of a collector.—Northern Light. Ifa bu‘ildng t;:de quarrel was the cause of murderng nearly 40 inno- cent people in Wall st., in no way connected wit® the controversy. the story needs anather chapter<—of the electric chair for the gui'lty parties.—St. Paul | Pioneer, Press. ] veralls fad is rather confusing.” morning 1 tried to hiré a prominent society leader to lay some brick.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. . One'of the disadvantages of refusing to lend money to your friends is‘ that they will go away and knock you harder than your enemies will—St. Cloud Daily. Times. i Louis Colli\lu should take care of himself. Everybody wants to see him | in the big chair in tha state senate, even if it is necessary to put an extra cushion in it.—S8t. Paul Dispatch. - —_— f Train callers also receive 13 per cent increase, but doubtless it would be too much to expect that they will on that account deliver their mgssages heul{uihhthe English language, instead of the cultivated intonations of the bull biid lion.—Northern Light. & ! b A woman' who is looking for ahusband says she wants a loving man and nof a New Yorker. Well, what does she expect? Nobody ever claimed that husbandry was the leading industry of New York.—Brainerd Dispatch. The last of ihe “conscientious objectors” have now been set free. It is held that their punishment is sufficient. The law has been vindicated. They h}ven'h—-Litfle F:ills Transcript. : It is doubtful if it ever pays to tell a man exactly what yoli think of him may want to sell him something sometime.—S8t. Cloud Daily Times. eaflfer life and habits {F 18" of likely to Indicate any particular good or bvil trait In the person possessing ft. | J£ the youug map or woman who fecls impatlent at the old folks' no- ] tions will cease to shrug a shoulder and exclalm: “I hope I'm not like that when I'm old,” and will turn his attention to the younger generation, starting with himself, he is llkely to do much more for human progress. When he himself has reached the age of fixed ideas his character will de- pend on his previous habits of raind; 1f he has kept himself free from prej- udice and cocksuredness and has been always willing to learn better ways of thinking and doing, he will be likely to remain correspondingly moré ration- T8 GROW OLD GRACEFULLY Desirabte Condition That Greatly Ds- " pends on One’s Habits of Mind L ;. Formed in Youth. The most Inevitable—and one of the easlest—of the things we do is to grow old. Yet what a difference there Is in way different people do it! You probably know, for fhstance, some ittie old Indy who, although she may not be beautiful or brilllant, 'is Just “nice"—which is apt' to mean that Instead of bossing or scolding, she tries not to be troublesome or. unrea- sonable tg those around her. Or rath- er, she does not have .to try, for it is characteristic of elderly human beings that they seldom try very hard to forin | 8l with advancing y(-nra,.. nud‘wlll. in new habits. Youth is the perlod of | truth not he “like that” when he is endeavor, and old age of results. This old.—Pendleton East Oregonlan. 18 the, rgason for the futllity of young | T i COMMUNAL SPIRIT IN JAPAN folks' displeasure at their parents’ ! “old-fashloned” ideas. Such Ideas are | Writer Notes the Fact That Natives Share Their Sneezes With Strang. ‘fixed; they will not change. ers on Street Cars. Yet not all elderly people are age- bound In their thoughts; many can be tolerant of Innovations, and-a few can — even adopt.them. Such a flexible con- | Japanese do things In public dition ofl the elderly mind is, like the swhich we would estracize a. man or rigid, intolerant sort, a product of send him to_the lockup. From fheir Mac’s Confectionery - SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY Sw— s Mrs. Gregory’s Home Made' Chocolates, i 61c per pound box . AT THE FOUNTAIN French Pastry—Hot Apple Pie a la mode ) e gnd Delicious Coffee or Cocoa. ABERCROMBIE & McCREADY FOR SALE 40 acres land adjoining Lavinia, will m k fine truck or chickén farm. Wi e iy Sy m ill sell cheap BEMIDJ1, MINN, ~ ; ' dec. and Mgr. | low. their mouths when talking or yawning, for COMING TO THE REX | |\ SUNDAY R ! The \fre\ekle-f;eed _funomenon + e R T e vanl i vomanse. C ———whoops away with the swiftest set of laugh- thrills you ever saw. - : 2 | RECOGNIZING A POOR ONE P A }. Nearly every human who has some- thing good tells about it in boastful tones, but not everyone who by chance ¢ghas something bad proclatms J11 selection or ill fartuné. inlackily it cle @ theé puhlic ‘The managetaen e Grand the- ! tre recognized a’lemon in a recent Im shown there and .preferring to hew his patrons that he was willing "to do the right thing in view of the act that the show was billed for ncre than one .day’s showing, the |manager told the public ‘tfisz the W th only a nickel and an- he would present the admission pr | / “THE GIRL COMES IN _ BUT YOU-STAY OUT!” %y 'The door slammed suddenly and the girl was spirited away to the Chinese dens whence white women never return. ! Whirl in the chase with Dinty! But you'l] have to go some ' to keep up with him! ~ MARSHALL NEILAN e presents his story Six rushing reels of mystery, drama, romance, laughter and thrill! Big cast of favorites headed by ifying retu late. - ros at some future! A PATRON Man’s 8mall Importance. .. Following Is by Samuél Johnson: A new method for extracting phosphoric acld from phosphate rock, dis- “The trath is that 10 man Is much res covered by the bureau of soils, United States Department of Agriculture, may gunrded by the rest of the world, He revolutionize the world's fertilizer industry. By the new process, worked out that conslders how little he dwells at Arlington, Va., the acld is extracted from phosphate rock by heatfog the mpon the condition.af others v/l learn | Fock with sand and coke in the fuel-fed furnace, shown in the picture how little the atten<lon of otuers is at- - A tructed. by himseld, ,While we see! » -axespreSSENRgR ' Wwiltitudes passing hefore us of whom, communal spirit which tolerates bath-| sand strangers passing before them;. Perhaps, not one -yppears to deserve |. ing in public together they go to the they dr undress, ‘eat, sleep and‘ our notice or excit; our sympathy, we other extreme of coming out on their drink whisky by the fumbletful on the Should remember that. we,. likewlse, ! balconles and clearing their throats , trains—yet thelr inzer lives are as se-. Are lost in thesame throng; that the at five o'clock In the morning and ex-' cret to one another as they seem to eye which happens to, glapce upon us pectorating into the open gutters be- ' be to the forcigner. 18 turned in 2 momgnt on bim that fol. . . | It 1s as though from\ behind the !0WS 1S, and that tite utmost which we © They will hold their “fans befdre. scenes—in which many people are CAD reasonably hore, or fear, is o fill more interested than inithe play ft- % Vacant hour with grattle, and be for- self—the actors had come, forgetting, i S¢tten™ \ In a moment of absent-mindedness, to e put on their make-up, or had come ! upon the street, forgetting to take it ' off.—Sydney Greenbie, in “Japan, Real | 4 and Imaginary.” < Wesley Barry as do we, but will cough and sneeze in your face onStreet cars. And det, among the refined, observance of cus- tom is patheticglly beautifult They eome to celebrate the arrival of the cherry blossoms by bringing with them their. geishn and thelr children; they Spaces Between Wordl.' The custom of scparatipg”words bp g blank space In writing was not om- \ ployed until the Tenth century. : move jn perféct hordes; flney 20 to the . Pat . . X e formms, bowing and bowin® Al hOVINE e pern s iy peeTieh oBte @ rondy man; and writiog wa READ THE PIONEER WANT ADS again 15 though there werewt & thou- eqic of the instrament, exRct man.—Hoeon. I : - £ i B g!IIIIIIIIIIllIfllIIIIIlllllmfll!lIlIIIIIIlI|llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIl||IIIIIIIIlIIIIHIHIMIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIII_'E: LAST SHOWING TONIGHT" E fle ; — — S d :=-=_ \ Y & y — By o § ———— = Ppresenits B in real'l asller Electric ’ pafirs ,f_or ItSelf i o The EDEN ELECTRIC MAN is here next week, to explain and ‘demon- "~y strate this. ghepte: wonderipl. device. A G T 5 T | JUST THINK ! gl only a few dollars down and the balance cheap- - erthanrent. |, ‘ ,sy'rmKnrAcxm Uuthor of THEMIRACLE MAN"| colossal super crook. drama with twist v~ o st&ry’of agirl - ) :f;bf:&gfgaifi - § Phone, call or write - t smmsmmze 41 NAYLOR ELECTRIC CO. A nuwkrLL COMEDY i Rex -Union Orchestra—Special Musical -Program ' i Matinees; 2:3b—10c-30c - s o Evenings, adults 30c, plus\war tax, 3c. Children 15¢ 118 Third St. Phone 122 il IllllllllllllullfllllluflmllIIIIlllullllllllllllmllllllllfllllllllllfllll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIllIHllIIIIIIIIlillllllllllillllllllIllllllll!lllllllllfi £ - | = £ = s = E = E g U T £

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