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~ I b LIMITED A Life Saver | As You Like It says a pint of hootch saved a man’s life the other night—he didn’t drink it. ‘ * = 0% ! Still Confined. | (E. Liverpool, Ohio, Tribune) ! “Martin Toot, west end grocer, met death with an unfortunte acci- . dent as he attempted to board a train in the Union station in Pittsburgh Wednesday evening, and as a result, will be confined to his bed for some time.” + % o Man’s Danger (London Advertiser) “A Kansas City woman killed_her By Chatles © Western Newspaper Union GEY LP, Nou NOLUNG TOLGH®. THe RIGHT \S husband and forgot about it. Man is in danger of becoming of so little consequence that Webster may have to revise the definition of man to read: ‘A thing used during a mar- riage ceremony, but only as a matter of custom.”” Down On the Farm . HIDES (American Legion Weekly) Cow hides, No. 1, 1b. +..oouves Ge-Te “How does Farmer Jones take it 4c-5¢ now that cidar is illegal?” “Oh, he takes it hard.” . .8¢-9¢ . ...50c-60c Called for and Delivered £.$2.50283.50 (Boston Transcript) 2 i From a Magazine: “I pity the POTATOBS | woman who marries him, as she will, Chicago, Feb. 7.—Potato’ receipts, have to take ix; flo'ors*to serub.” 71 cars. Market steady. Northern Deacong, each ... Horse ‘hides, large. | whites, sacked, $1.10 to $1.20; bulk, Light Drinker { $1.15 to $1.25; Wisconsin Kkings, The St. Joseph. Gazette says it sacked, 95¢ to $1.05. | would hardly be right to call a moon-! shine consumer a light drinker. Nor| would a whiskey runner necessarily | be called fleet on foot. ! WEEKLY MARKETGRAM (U. S. Bureau of Markets) * x o® | Washington, D. C., For week end- Federal Agents, Attention! | ing February 2 1921—Hay and Feed F: pi S | —Minneapolis report twin city mar- “Still Going Strong,” is the head-| kets flooded with low grade hay, mus- line of an editorial in the Winnipeg ty and unsound stock selling at $6 to| Free Press. Pussyfoots are urged to‘l $8. Chicago hay receipts very light be on the lookout if it starts this way, | but demand of a hand to mouth char- and watch it disappear beneath the | acter. As buyers appear not to be : | MARKETS § CROWN RESTS LIGHTLY ON CONSTANTINE’S HEAD Athens, Jan. 20.—(By Mail to United Press)—Despite the fact th . i 5 H s 95 per cent of the éreek people vc‘fi tirely irredentist and imperialistic. ing favored the return'of King Con-| N stantine, the Hellenic crown restsiEAsTm‘x:;fi_try‘Til};A: E oM t OTT est dreams of an irredentist Greece. | Loyalists, hedded by Gounaris and others, are for the latter. They be- l{eve Greece has bitten off a bigger bite of Turkey than she can digest. On the other hand they have Constantine to contend with. His policies are en- lightly upon the alleged pro-German ruler’s head. Constantine is back. Back to stay, according to the Royalists. But un- S. S. Wilson, of the Wilson & Co. ready-to-wear stort, who re- derneath the surface is an undercur-| ¢e0tly returned from an Eastern buy- rent that allied statesmen predict will P8 trip, reports Some interesting in- make his future reign tempestuous. if"'m“ft“’" with regard t]" market val- The Greek people brought Constan-| "5y, Wearing aatenal tine back for two reasonsg. First, ac- |y, Silks, «ginghams and .wash goods cording to competent observers, be-| ave advanced smce" e made our cause they were tired of the misrule{purd"?ses iast wgek, sald, Mr. Wik of Venizelist partisans; secondly, be-‘s‘m’ and indications are thapother p.ri';ked. nd their vanity had been|son " «and indications are that there . will be short ials i 3 For days preceding the plebiscite,11img;,"E Shordige of mulerisls miminy and prior to the election, the national | | The fact that a slight rise in many watchword was “erchete—He is com- | iti in- g Today it is “Irthai—we huw commodities has been made is an in d {dication that the bottom had _ been brought him.” _Tomorrow, a promi-|reached ai iti nent Greek admiral, who has served| sholied nd thet: thess commbditles nenk. A Y are now seeking a normal level. It in diplomatic capacities in Paris and | will doubtl i i London, said, it may be ‘“we have oubtless romit in rencwing the surface if it visits Bemidji. | alarmed about light receipts, receiv- « % » erg are unable to work prices higher. ' . . | Good No. 1 timothy would sell atj Tilting the Lid | about $19, Minneapolis, $25 Chicago. | Those closely acquainted with the Demand for southwestern' prairie in president-elect say that there will be Chicago limited, top grade would; no tilting of the lid under the Harding bring about $20. Demand in general administration. There are many slips is light, receipts ample. Alfalia between the cup and the still and one weak and lower in Cincinnati market of those slips may jar the lid loose. were 114 cars are reported in term- That is evidently the opinion of those inals. Quoted: No. 1 timothy $32.- who persist in stiching around to sce 50 Atlanta, $26 Cincinnati; No. 2 if someone isn’t going to slip. That timothy $31 Atlanta, $15 Minnea- is, slip them a little. .50 Atlanta, $21 Omaha, $23 Cin- No. Alfalfa _$28 Atlanta, Cincinnati; - No. 1 $3 |einnati; ':Ad lr;mst significlalmt observation| OUTDOOR CARNIVAL IN FULL noted by many, is the temper of the| Greek soldier. Thousands were | FWINC ATCHINUEAFCRR brought to Athens from Smyrna after the elections to participate “in thes Minneapolis, Feb. 7.—Wholesalers plebiscite and welcome the king. |ang rotailers of the Northwest, inter- Several battalions mobilized were ested in automotive products, were for return to the front. The regu-!guests of the national automobile lars, who, for more than a week, have | show here today. not been subject to military discipline| As a part of the winter sports pro- upon order by M. Demetrius Goun-!gram featuring automobile. week, aris, minister of war, were surly and | women were competing in,a state sullen. They chanted: championship horeshoé pitching con- ’ . (By United Press) “He is here. = FOR GOSH SAKE, ~ WHN D\ONY A\ WO“‘_D, ONWN VoL CALL ME 1 WOz 0N ON YOP UNTIL A MINNY AGDY NEW LICENSE FEES FOR AUTOMIBILES PROPOSED + On the basis of 300,000 cars to be licensed in the state under the Good Roads Amendment No. 1 plan, the new tentative proposal will yield $5,- 732,277, it is estimated, or ‘an av- erage slightly more than $18 a car.| The schedule is based wholly on val- uation, starting with minimums of 310 on passenger cars and $15 on trucks and adding 1.5 per cent of the value of passenger and 2 per cent of that of commercial cars. | The new proposal is applied to com mon makes of cars as follows: i © “after; Every Meal” Everywhere all over 'the ‘world Ppeople Make— Com. Ford . | Y use this goody Dodge . . .. 21 Buek . 24 for its Studebal & 26 ¢ b f. Franklin . 36 Cadillac . . 52 —egg——“s. as Packard . 72 , well as its STEOPATHY BILL IS a pleasure. DEFEATED BY HOUSE The house of represemtatives on Friday defeated the bill changing the laws governing the practice of oste- opathy. The vote was 59 for and 45 against. Sixty-six votes are required to pass a bill. The bill was designed to raise the educational requirements of osteo- paths and permit practitioners to use titles of physicians and surgeons. Rep- resentative Leo K. Eatqn of Minne- apolis led the fight against the bill. EUROPEAN RELIEF OVER HALF SUBSCRIBED FRIDAY Chicago, Feb. 7.—Announcement | was made Friday at middlewestern headquarters of the EuropeansRe- lief Council, 108 S. LaSalle Street, Keeps teeth clean, breath sweet, throat soothéd. WRIGLEYS 1 | e = | polis, $23 (‘incin;mtl; No. 1 alfalfa BEMIDJI BOWLERS WIN GVER GRAND FORKS FIVE:** I'tions. Bemidji bowlers copped off the high score in all events against the |$14 Omaha, prairie $14 Minneapolis, $11 Omaha, $15 Kansas City; N prairie $11.- Minneapolis, $9 Omaha. No change in feed market condi- Demand remains quiet and prices generally lower than last week. Gluten feed reduced another $5 mak- team from Grand Forks in matches ing decline $13 per ton within two the Crawford alleys yesterday af- wecks. Hominy steadily selling off; tcrnoon and last evening. High score bran down in the doubles was won by Anderson and Sievert with 1,084, singles by Sie- vert with 555, and team match by Be- midji with 2,538, |at around $22 fered by Minneap: St. Louis feed manufacturers report having contracted No. 1 Alfalfa meal delivered. Linseed . | they would soon occupy Constantino- ‘We have brought him. Now we are going back.” On the other hand, the new recruits marched forward singing the Con- |stantine 'song, “The Son of the/ | Eagle,” and carried placards and pic- {tures of Constantine. Entgnte military observers station- jed with the Greek army declare the morale has been maintained by con- stant assurance by Venizelist that ple and restore the standard of the| Byzantine empire over the Mosque, where now flies the Star and Cres- test today. Tomorrow.there will be a race horse parade _and ,Thursday horse racing on the Lake of Isles gpurse will be the big-outdoor attrac- ion. " Saturday, the closing day of the show, is Northwestern dealers’ day. TYPICAL N. D. WIND' AND WEATHER ARE MISSING (By United Press) Williston, N. D., Feb. 7.—The typ- ical North Dakota wind has been miss- ing this winter together with -typi- Chicago, that the national collection for $33,000,000 to feed the starving children of Eurppe has passed the halfway mark. New York hos given $3,000,000 to the fund though the qampaign in that state has just been launcked. Illinois has given almost a million dollars, but as $750,000 of this comes from Chicago, it is antici-| pated that the down state sections will yet sontribute generously to the| starving children of Europe. Funds | are recéiyed by Brig. Gen. Charles G. | Nawes at the Central Trust company, | Chicago. E | Minnesota has collected $442,000; Texas $248,000; Washington, $214,-/ 000; Wisconsin, 328,000. The Ha- waiian Islands, which like other ter- | ritorials of the United States havé) generously thrown themselves into | the Hoover relief program. have giv-! en $32,300 to date from their small | white populatioi. Governor Riggs) of Alaska who is sponsoring the col-| lection there sends in $7,800, with| . the outlying districts not yet report-‘ ing. The maple smashers piled up the meal steady; cottonseed meal weak. |cént. i following counts: { Good demand for 36 per cent cotton-| King Constantine’s hold on the peo-' cal North Dakota weather. Farmers SINGLES |seed meal reported in southwest. |pl is half religious, half superstitious, CpriPlain that wind has been so scarce Grand Fork: 1st 2 3 IQuoted: Bran $23. middlings $21,|Tn the folklore runs the legend that that their windmills have stood idle Grand Forks— 1st 2nd 3rd Total fipur middlings reddog $31, some day a king and warrior named and they were forced to pump water 147 143 " 449 Minnenpolis; $40 Buf-| Constantine wiil wrest from the| ioF the stock either by gasoline pumps 146 137 “alo falo, $39 Minneapolis: 36 ver eent|Tyrks the capital Constantin€ the|°F by hand. 5 18 1 cotton seed meal $28 Memphis; glu- | Great died defending, The peasant,| _ rioneers claim that a winter such }h{ 12()? 5;1 ! go: White hominy | ged with Royaligt’ propaganda, be: as is experienced this year means good Bemidji— BLME 481 N ity lives that the prosont king i destined %™ ________ 5 T =e2 M7+ 1 to be that crusader. ’?\'3(‘12:“ :f,'; Z;;‘;'\ airy Products —Butter markets| If Constantine goes to wnr'—nt’wuls.éin SHIFPING TO. -, . " Poss 1o aaptave faited to recover sh;;*ny:th and | present—he will have a war-weary ADA PRECEDES “DRY e 90 54Llne week cloced with feeling unset-| population and a bankrupt exchequer - . gf“:‘r‘e“ 3 2 }m g‘;;;"‘v" aud prices averaging 2 cents back of him, assuming _the entgnte Port ](gy gm?“bprm) 1 . b 10 jower ju enstern markets; practical-|fails to foot the bill. On the other ortal, N. D., Feb.-7.—A rush of Ebert . b 170 469 1y ynchanged at Chicago. At pre-[hand, if he fails, he will have a dis- Kentucky whiskey into Canada be- Lange ... 156 133 475! dont t1 is Inck of trading interest. | illusioned popu]aée to explain matters fore the bone dry law clamped on the DOUBLES Foreizn butter available on markets |t Venizelos has a record to point L4 February 1st in Saskatchewan was Sievert and Anderson, Bemidji.1,084 but little demand. Prices, 92 score oyt thousands of square miles adde shown by railroad records here. Sev- B e enehTlo4p demestiv, fresh: New York 48¢: Chi- {4 the natianal domain. He also has orey carloads passed through here the Sandbrind and MeGowan, G 1,042 cago 46 ¢; hiladelphia 48e; Boston, g vecord of ignominious flight to erase. ba“ week in January. They are sent Kerr and Ebert, Bemidj 979 | 49 {But 80 did Constantine—and he came , Y, CXBFess, the cost of expressing a Popp and Crowell, Bemi 942 Cheese markets lost some of thefr | pack ! carload from Louisville t6 Regina be- the week and prices | 040 | firmicss during tendency still ' Buslar and Young, G. w [have declined slightly; FIVE-MAN TEAMS b downward. Buyers look for lower Bemidji— i prices and operating cautiously. Sievert 226 167 180 Fancy held cheese firm. Very little Popp 180 123 212 export business during week. Prices |4 Crowell . 149 157 144 rresh cheese Wisconsin primary mar- Kerr 143 161 172 kets average, Twins 24c; Daisles 25¢; Anderso 167 167 Deuble Daisies 241ic ;Longhorns —— ——'263%c: Young America | Totals .. 775 875 pruits and Vegefables—Northern Grand total, [round white pptatoes declined 5 to Grand Forks— . <o {10 cents per 100 pounds f."o. b. Sandbrind 153 165 182|yeaching S0c¢ to 90c. Chicago carlot | Buslar . 134 112 164 market down 10c to 1bc at. §1 to! Filtean ....... 147 185 147 $1.10, sacked round whites 10c to| Young 159 201 145 15¢ lower at Now York shipping McGowan 187 180 points closing $1 to $1.10 New York —— morket down 15¢, reaching $1.50 to Totals . 850 818 $1.65 bulk. { Grain—The week opened with ad-| vancing wheat prices but on the 29th | recessions set in and prices dropped | MINNEAPOLIS CHAMBER OF rapidiy. The 6%c break in Argen- 12 tina wheat on the 31st added to COMMERCE TO FILE ANSWER | bearishness in American markets. JEER— | Europeon financial conditions and | (By United Press) German attitude toward Allied in-| St. Paul, Feb. 7.—Representatives demnities also causing some concern of the: Minneapolis Chamber of Com-|On 2nd. however, there was an ad- merce today were expected to file YNCe of about fe from the low point with the Federal trade commission, ' Buenos Aires wheat and this in e nomer £ charges of the Equity |""njunction with disclesure of aver- | 3 & old coudition in allied grains led &"gi‘;‘:fi:f';fr ;;f“c‘;'c‘g: St. Paul, al /to buying. Receipts at principal " | markets decrensed. At close o Charges filed by the Bavity Go-0p- corn showed strong undertone. Min-| e""].“’°c‘l’q’f‘°‘h2‘”‘“e fec are the Minne-|yqqpolis reports show flour demand: | %‘;? s Bes cr of Commerce and gaek wheat demand except for choice A e of race ?zfi:}::‘tsg with No. 2 dark cash 10¢ to 17c over T apa xc | Vinneapolis March. For the week %x:gof‘urgx: alle ‘t:;})t_ut‘hu \;:;te:: Chicago March wheat lost 6 7-8 at! Sraph company | M $1.56 7-8; May corn 2%4c¢ at 65%ec. E:h;e'fig::to : g;kaefi-lfi n::"tl;\q;mtv;s: Minneapolis x\k ch wheat d(‘);vn sse its tieker service in any grain office | ‘ sg“‘;“,‘z: N 1 S nPt approved by the chamber. | $1.69. Chicago M The charges, members of the ex-; change claim, brought about the Fed- eral trade commission investigatjon of grain marketing in the United States. | Grand total, 2,433, | BRING RESULTS linate the incentive that has kept the THE PIONEER WANT ADS i !ing $2,200. | | PITTSBURGH HOCKEY TEAM MEETS ST. PAUL TONIGHT Withdrawal of allied credit would shoot 'the Greek army’'s morale to pieces, officials declare, while relin- quishment of the Greek irredentist dream of Constantinople would elim- (By United Press) nation and its unreclaimed popula-| St. Paul, Feb. 7.-Pittsburgh’s tions united through more than eight, hockey team invaded the west today. continuous years of war. Tonight they will play-the first of a If the.allies adopt an obstructionist | series of two games with the St. Paul policy, Greek statement will be faced | Athletic club team. Thursday and Constantine or forsaking tReir fond-%Duluth. il D ” “BEEN MY DRUGGIST NOW FOR FIFTEEN YEARS” ———————————————————————————————————— The other day a prescription wags sent in to us—to be filled and delivered. The customer lived in a remote corner of town and sent the prescription by a friend. But she knew that we would fill and deliver it— promptly. Because we had “been my drug- e ' 1 0 | i | I | ‘; with the alternative of repudiating Friday night Pittsburgh will play atTf 188 | | . gist for fifteen years,” she knew she could | depend on us. We like that term, “my druggist.” We'll serve you just as well if you make us | “your druggist.” ~Barker 217 3rd St. ! THE DRUGGIST Phcne 34 e THE UNIVERSAL CAR “THE FORD TOURING CAR” | | | | ERE is the greatest motor car in all the world. Great because I I there is more of it in use than of any other car in the world. Great because that in our demand for a million and a quarter Ford cars this year fully 509 of that demand is for the Touring Car. Surely every Ford touring car is a car of great service. You see it wherever you go, day or night, shifie or rain, summer or winter—the ever-faithful Ford Touring Car is delivering service and satisfaction, pleasure and economy, in a larger measure than falls to the lot of any other one piece of mechanism in the werld. v ‘'We can now deliver Ford cars to you with reasonable promptness. Leave your orders without delay, if you would be wise. The prudent - mnan carries his umbrella when it is dry, because any fool can carry one when it rains! 2 Never forget that right hand to every Ford Touring Car is that ever-dependable and universal “Ford After-Service.” Here we are, with the genuine made Ford parts, Ford mechanics, and Ford equip- ment, to give service to Ford cars jnstantly, so that your car is never out of commission. - C. W.JEWETT CO,, INC. Authorized Ford Sales and Service TELEPHONE 970 BEMIDJI |