Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 22, 1921, Page 2

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e TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 22, 1921 MAYORALITY RACE HAS THREE CANDIDATES 'TODAY After you eat~—always use (By United Press) i A 0 N ‘ c Rochester, Feb. 22,—C. B. Brown, FOR YOUR STOMACH'S SAKE) incm_nbcnt was a candidate for re-i _pne or two tablets—eat like candy. election in the mayorality primary| InstantlyrelievesHeartburn,Bloated here today. E. . Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, H. Newhouse also are candidates for | foodsouring,repeating, headacheand nomination. \the many miseries caused by - . = Acid-Stomaci 4 EATONICis the bestremedy, ittakes . fifxetl‘:nrrlx;:ful acigs a?d gases right nuz of the body and, of course, you ge well. Tensoi‘thousm_xss‘,’,wor:x grf;ily’ benefited. Guarantced to satisfy or money refynded by‘g_gur own drug- gist Cost a trifie]’ Please try it! Carl Anderson’s at Lake Alice, Fri-|them over the ultimate fate of the ddy, afternoon. motor vehicle, especially on the farm. Misses Nora’ Nyhus and Gladys Trog of Becida, are guests of Mrs. E. L. Horner this week. Mr. Barrett carried mail the first 'c«f«:t;*&;;:«««*: IR LAKE HATTIE tox I REZ2 22222 2 2 R 2R E ) | Mrs. Harry Millis and Grandma | Millis spent Sunday with the lat- iter’'s daughter, Mrs. George . D. | Greigg. { Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Tiara and |daughter Valeria spent Sunday at |Al White’s. Little :Miss Valera has {been ill, but is ' attending school lagam. . ~ BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ‘‘Mechanical power,” said Arkell, “will never supplant Old Dobbin on the farm. Far from falling off in of the week while Mr. Grubb was in |numbers, the horse population of the Beniidji. . jcontinent is increasing. I look for e a steady development in horse breed- SHED NO TEARS FOR OLD ing that will sericusly affect the DOBBIN. SAYS CANADIAN G. E. CARSON, President E. H. DENU, Sec, and Mgr. G. W. HARNWELL, Editor o J. D. WINTER, City Editor automobile and truck busingss. Mo- tor trucks are a valuable ‘asset in the world’s work, but there ‘are certain kinds of work not only on :thg:farm but in the city which trucks can not 1 do and which only a good'team of over the ultimate fate of theHorse, |horses can do. Don’t be afraid that . ‘which, theypelieve; will digappear |the horse will join the dodo and pter- bock! without questipn before the motor-driven vehicle. But jo-dactyl in extinction. He will con- {‘m...!‘.':.sj',‘%'&i“'é':é'ku . A H. S. Arkwell, livestock comimissioner tinue forever to be numberad among | RINGWORM, TETTE { of Canada,declared at the recent' the most important factors in hu-| gther Mehing shin disestes (By United Press) £ g 2 o Calgary, Alta., Feb. 22.—Senti- k mental folks have shed many_tears 4 % Eatored at the office at Bemidji, Minnesots, as second-class matter, A B Acs ‘0t Congeata of March'se 1870, : g - Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Stillwell and family were dinner guests at J. G. Hoglin’s Sunday. /' No attention paid to anonymous contributions. Writer's name must known to, the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communica- for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday 3 énch week to insure publication in the current issue. | Rev. Mr. Morton and wife and Mrs. |Dora Bell were dinner guests at R. Boardman’s Corner Drug, Sip’u B Bemidji, Minn. . 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 016 VAT werroereersrrreeene $6.00 [Ii 39" (0. 1) TRp— X .| ] Three Months «.ooeeeeeceeee 125 THE. WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, published evoery Thursday and sent postage paid to any address fcr, in advance, $2.00. i OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS | WASHINGTON . | God wills no man a slave. The man most meek, ~ No angel led our chieftain’s steps aright; No pilot cloud by day, no flame by night; No plague not portent spake to foe or friend, No doubt assailed him, faithful to the end. Al for $7.15 You Save $I3.35 Offer No. 1 PIONEER ... Good Housekeeping..1 Ye: Pictorial Review...._.1 Yea ! ... $5.00 3a00] Weaklings there were, as in the tribes of old, Who craved for fleshpots, worshiped calves of gold, Murmured that right would harder be than wrong, And freedom’s narrow road so steep and long; But he who ne’er on Sinai’s summit trod, Still walked the highest heights and talked with God; Saw with anointed eyes no promised land , By petty bounds or pettier cycles spanned, ’ Its people curbed and broken to the ring, Packed with a caste and saddled with a king; But freedom’s heritage and’ training school, Where men unruled should wisely learn to rule, Till sun and moon should see at Ajalon, King’s heads in dust and freemen’s feet thereon. ‘Al for $7.65 You Save $4.35 Offer No. 2 PIONEER Cosinopolitan Pictorial Revie | F- ‘Witson's homerSunday. cengress of the Western <Canada man labor. As the world’s human v S2 et shous fisk; = =2 —— UL Prices Slashed! The Best M rices dlasned. 1Nh€ HESt viag: able to offer for 30 days only an exceptional e Tagazines o é_ ! er in editorial appeal the entire range of magazine appeal— . prices, in club with Oppormmty in this great selling campaign will supply the magazine reading of your home Who saw him face to face on Horeb’s peak, But when, years after, overfraught with care, That led so far; now barred the promised land. > Ma gaZlneS Review publlshed. e bas gained this reputation because PICTORIAL REVIEW &ives you the best short Pictorial Review fiction. Mrs. E. L. Horner and Mrs. L. V. |Livestock Union here that-tliose who population increases, the horse popu- | Hadpel::were social. callers at Mrs. |have tears to shed would Detter sh?(l Ilat(on will keep pace with, it.”” By Mail J PECIAL ith T HE sa o Y SPE arrangement with a num- ] e G . sacrifice in prices that these magazinesiare making is their contribution ber of ‘the leading magazines, we are hls Ls ' #}l;i‘ as publie; spirited;business men to the ;nation wide drive on prices. The opponun?ty to oug readers to procure annual Your . shqrt ‘stories, fashions, articles, gravure pictures, departments for the home, subscriptions for about onc-half the regular serial novels, and the news of the world. Two or more of the magazines united - . = for 1921. Send your~order foday. Tomorrow. h 11 ] . rrow, you may forget. Use the con- THE DAILY PIONEER toisave MOIleY venient blank at the bottom‘of this announcement. - u ‘Had slain a tyrant for a bondman’s wrong, : 7 ‘And met his Lord with sinless soul and strong. L I lhe Seven His feet once trod life’s pathway to despair, . Hat For that one treason lapse, the guiding hand God makes no man a slave, no doubter free; £yt i o Abiding faith alone wins liberty. Lo Pi [Oi‘i' I’ s f’Amerln’s Greatest Magazine for Women - i PICTORIAL REVIEW {os, 05, [ ieiie the TWO MILLION women who read it main- tain that it gets better and bettef every year. Stories—in_ fact, short- story_critics have bestowed signal honors on 2 i PICTORIAL REVIEW glycs o1, spec 510k Y have made real worth-while achievements in the world of affair to millions of women PICTORIAL REVIEW (3, ™02 Sheir own Clothes. 79 a_necessity_because it illustrates the world-famous _Pictorial Review styles. Leading stores everywhere scll Pictorial Reviéw l'an:ims. CTO! Patterns—the best offall ‘¢ PICTORIAL REVIEW F2{(C0=if for 25, 30, and 35 ceats. _ Other patterns seil for 40 and SO cents. No wonder Pictarial Review pattern shies are doubling up. Women know a good thing when they see it. ICTO! through its departments, PICTORIAL REVIEW {72480, 0 { Rk o housskeeping prob- n inspiration to the woman of the business i a delight to the woman who enjoys fancy necdlework. P Great Novels in 1921 in Pictorial = Review. Seven! By Booth Tarkington, Arthur Somers Roche, Louis Joseph Vance, Corra Harris, Joseph C. Lincoln, Kathleen Norris, Samuel Hopkins Adams 25 cents the copy $3.00 the year Cosmopolitan America’s Greatest Magazine Each issue contains generoiis portions of three serial novels, plus seven short storics, and four special arvicles . over ome hunds thousand words of &ditorial matter. Each copy i8 truly ten hours of enjoyment. Every issuc of Cosmopolitan is ns good as a $2.00 hook, and you get U ssues for less than the cost of two good book: £ ue, article by article, story by story, with an nagazine and you wou't hesitate 'a minute about including Cosmopatmn in your list for the comim: year. 35 cents the copy $4.00 the year L4 9, +° Hedyst’s The One Indispenanble Magazine th bse of making At [t ng Al will be found m All for $7.65 You Save $4.35 Offer No. 3 PIQNEER .. Hearst's Pictorial Revie Offer No. 4 PIONEER All for $7.65 You Save $4.35 His work well done, the leader stepped aside, ' Spurning a crown with more than kingly pride, Content to wear the higher crown of worth, ' While time endures First Citizen of earth. —James Jeffrey - i Roche. 0 MORE HOUSES—LOWER RENTS While efforts are being made in Pennsylvania and a number of other states to have legislation passed that will prevent prop- erty owners from increasing rentals excessively, it must be evi- dent to all persons giving the subject serious thought that the only method By which rents can be kept reasonable is by -erec-| tion of more homes. The ban placed upon unnecessary construction during the war, and the high cost of building since, have brought the na- tion to the point where 1,500,000 homes are required to meet, the needs of the people, if housing® conditions are to be what they should for their material and moral welfare. With this great shortage of homes, it is not surprising that landlords are able to demand almost any sum they see fit for the use of their property. Rentals have been doubled, and.in| cases trebled, as compared with rates pefore the war, based | largely upon the inflated values created by war conditions and fl:te bidding of persons against each other for possession of prop- erty. ‘All for $7.65 You Save $4.35 Offer Ng.‘ 5’ PIONEER Cosmopolitan keeping..1 Year. Al for $7.65 Good Housekeeping..1 Year. You Save $4.35 v Offer No. 7 PIONEER Cosmopolitan Hearst's All for $8.90 You Save $4.10 Compare the current ‘All for $9.40 You Save $4.60 Offer No. 8 PIONEER®™ Good Housckeepin Harper's Bazar. The future of home building depends mainly upon twe, factors—the cost of building material and wages of workers who are engaged in the construction of material and erection’ of buildings. Unless these elements are harmonized in a way that will insure lower costs for building, the work that will be done will be small compared with the great need of homes. Attempts to regulate rents by legislative enactment will wi ne in atést ouwshts of the World's Real Words of the World's Writers—the Think>rs—the ers. Offer No. 9 ‘All for dach issue as much serious hardly bring resuts desired, but they will discourage invest-| ment of money in home building, for no owner of property . wants the state to say how much rental he shall charge for it,| or what other disposition he can make of that which is his own.! There will be little reduction in rents until the number of homes; more nearly equals the demand, or until landlords are looking for tenants. Not actually true but close to it, that March 4, forth for a good many Democratic office-holders. 1921, means march Most of them have no average ally two ma discusses and solves, as 38 conts the copy Hearst's s to its readors @ libera r questions of home, fainily, bu: © of comment PIONEER Pictorial Re: Cort) private life. Hr»"'""i‘, Baz $4.00_ths year . $9.40 You Save $4.60 departments _that deal nishing and Decorati and Beauty, Eatert: for the Children, Need Good Housekeeping oceun be filled_by no ofiier period; “nclude it in vour list. 25 cents the copy { Good Housekeeping | The Homemaker’s Authority : Good Housekeeping serves interest of the typical American woman. Good Housekeeping has the best of fiction; Offer No. 10 PIONEER Hearst's Motor .. every activity and Fashions, ~Fur- W Al for $10.40 You Save $4.60 plage that can Be sure to Offer No. 11 $3.00 the year | PIONEER reason to object as they have been doing nicely the past eight years or; thereabouts.—Stillwater Daily Gazette. . Oup nation was founided to perpetuate democratic principles. These principles are that each man is to be trcated on his worth as a man without regard to the land from which his forefathers came.—The Brainerd Dispatch. .‘W-fning to husbands: The milliners are advertising “attractive fea- Better budget for the bonn tures in Paris hats.” ;. ilntelligent Fig Tree. I Fig u@ees are extremely sensitive to icold, the slightest touch of *“Jack ( ¥rost” belng sufficient to Kill the trees. ‘!cldom Ao they hear or mature frut above . the Ilatitude of Louisiana, writes George Parke in the American | {Forestry Magazine. But a fig tree, . planted beside a mud-and-stick ehim- ~"ney of a negru's cabin near Jackson, Miss, clung so closely to the warm ,surface, passing round between the ..side of the building and thence to the ~top, above which the shoots ure seen like a crown of emerald. Thus the tree endured the frost and occasional &now of a severe winter, bore fruit and thrived amid inhospitable sur- roundings. Sonnet Written on Seaweed. Coleridge once wrote a sonnet on a Got to Make It Hot. An cmployer remarks that a good deal of “roasting” seems necessary to get things well done."—Boston - Trau- seript. Spiritual Horticulture. When there is sunshine in the soul, there will be fruit and flowers in thg life—Boston Transcript. Unsatisfied. Man is made of dust and is generally out for niore—Boston Tganscript, over fifty years improve: Har hions and berter 1 Ame The saving not o pur single _for_several years' subscription. ‘magazine for women of culture and refinenint. 50 cents the copy Red Wing Republican. | nal Magazine of Motorimi i e editorial_matter in_motor is for the i strip ot seaweed, while Tennyson's | vidual -motorist —the ~owner—the man “In*Memoriam” was' first written in a buteher's ledger. drives the car. A wide awake automobile deatzr, garage 1 use of or accessory dealer wil because of its studied consumer intercst.; will hc|abl(~l to nse wants of his 5 Mator illustra T Repair articles are 50 cents the copy Harper’s Bazar s Bazar publishes in Cosmopolitan Harper's Bazar. ‘All for $10.40 You Save $4.60 Qffer No..12: PIONEER Hearst's' .. l‘!urper'p Baza han any c by helpi $6.00 the year All' for ol $10.40 $6.00 ) You Save $4.60 e ————— _.CUT DOTTED LINE AND ‘who owner i Motor He ges of Motor, bath 0 keep ahead Of-the. and cagify the test. fully illustrated. $6.9 tha yeae Enclosed find Motor Boating < The National Magazine of Mstor Boating MoToR BoaTinG is a guide and companion to the boatine enthusiast. and charts; 4 ‘motor ailments, but better .25 centa the cop: Tt pgiblishes water maps new boat designs cach month; e les on navigation. and o customs of the water: it cont 4 and tells not only how to Name .. rules, Taws and e E MAIL TO . BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER BEMIDJI, MINN. Date.... S—— 3 ) ...for offer No. Send your paper and the magazines by mail (By Carrier 75 cents extra) Street or R. F. D. . Be Sure You MAIL THIS SPECIAL _ ORDER BLANK

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