Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 2, 1921, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

P T A IR [] - bad Keep the Home Fires Burning t week or two has been a .the 'village - (dogs) pets, “about one: dozen of them has gone into"the' happy-hunting ground with- out disgrasion, somte of them should have been ‘there before thig, while other - were .persecuted withot, cause, while some :becanie target for sharp _ shoting, while the majority died in convu]slon, apparently from poison ing. Our sympathy :goes out to all/ _. those who lost their pet dogs, but wi have never been able to see any valu in dogs which do not recognize home. —Exchange. —Sympathetic, but— Slow or Exaggerated The Toledo Blade says: “It takes an hour or more for most gn-ls to get undressed togotoa dance.” If that is really so, we believe that the girl | myst have been terirhly slow or that the story is possibly exaggerated a trifle. —Whith Is Right?— Keen Obaservers The Stillwater ‘Gazette says that some years ‘ago the mothers made their own petticoats but u.e mothers and daughters of today do not, as a good many of them have no use for them as they don’t wear ’em. Is that really so" We hndn’t no- ticed. " —Stillwater Does Funny Thmgg— Picturesk A Imaginary..view- of- Lake: Bemidji from an airplane at the height of 10,- 000 feet fifty years ago the twenty- ninth day of last month at high noon. —TUse, Your Imagination— Confused anyex‘—“Are you positive the pnsoner is the man who stole your horse?” Prosecutor — “I was until you cross-examined me. Now I'm not sure if I ever had any horse at all.” London Answers. © Wait until the women lawyers be- come more common, then the men won't be given a chance to know any-| thing. | —Is that So!— Can that Be Possible? A minister has remarked that he believes his congregation has the sleepmg sickness every Sunday morn- ing. If that’s the case, then he ought to hold his church services some other time. —Am T Right?— Don’t Get Funny! It is said that the company which publishes Judge, a humorous maga-| zine, has failed. That is quite often the fate of people who try to get gay. That’s why we never tried to be hu- morous in this “colyum.” —Maybe It Isn't— More Specific It is rumored that a man on Minne- sota avenue offered to trade his wife for a vacant lot. He should have speci- fied whether he wanted a lot on Be. midji avenue or in Greenwood. \ —Darn the Suspense— In a Bad Way ~ ! The fellow who wanted to trade his| wife for a vacaft lot reminds us of the guy who got so far behind in his room rent that he eventually had to}| marry his landlady. \ —Pity the Poor— SOCIAL AND PERSONAL ‘C. W. Rardin of Brainerd was a Bemidji business visitor yesterday. Charles Durand of Puposky was a visitor in the city yesterday. ‘Mrs. Paul Pagle of Becida drive to Bemidji Tuesday and visited friends. Roger Ascham. Roger Ascham was a famous Eng- lish scholar and author, born at Kirby ‘Wiske, near Northallerton, In 1515, He graduated at Cambridge, and strug- gled with poverty until patrons came to his relief. He was famous for his general knowledge and acquirements fu. Greek and Latin, and is classed among older literary men, with Ed- mund Spenser, Sir Thomas More and Sir Philip Sydney. His death, in Lon- don, on December 30, 1568, is sald to have been occasioned by his too close application ‘to the composition of a poem, which he intended to present | to the queen on the anniversary of ber accession. WANTED_Skornge for mrnlture of | elght room house. Address “Stor- | age’ care Pioneer. 6t3-9 WHEN YOU WANT Wood sawed, ! called Laj;ipman. 986-W. 5 | islature for state aid, but to pro- i flat ! (rural) schools will therepy be $76 | tional aid of $125 for“each superior ! | one-teacher school to receive {one or two phases as they apply lo- |cally, but in its entirety and with 4t3-5 | from her store. After the first brood, M\SSES‘ | HIDES Cow hides, No. 1. .. Bull hides, No. 1, 1b. Kipp hides, No. 1, 1b. -Calt skins, No. 1, Deacons, each .. Horse hides, Tnrge. POTATOES Chicagos, March 2.—Potato re- ceipts, 39 cars. Market stronger. Northern whites, sacked, $1-20 to $1.30, bulk, $1.30 to $1.35. |PROPOSED BILL AFFECTS STATE AID IN COUNTY (Continued I'rom Page 1) rural teachers of the state may be |as conscientious, enthusiastic and ambitious as those of any other group, but they average less in ma- turity, experience and training:. The following section provides for a more adequate supervisory force. “For the cost of supervision of'un- graded elemenfary schools, in -addi- tion to the supervision given by the county superintendent, the state shall pay to any county for, “One supervisor, one-half the sal- {ary, but not to exceed $900%and one- half the traveling expenses, but not to excced $300. “Two or more supervisors, one- half the salaries, but not to exceed $1,800, and one-hail the traveling expenses, but not to exceed $400. “‘Aid for health work in the rural schools is also provided for. As planned in the bill each county may receive: For one school nurse, one-half the salary but not to exceed $700 and one-half the necessary traveling ex- penses, but not to exceed $300. “For two 'school nurses, one-half the salary but not to exceed $1,400 expenses, but not to exceed $400. “For three or more school nurses, one-half the salaries, but mot to ex-| ceed $2,00Q -and one-half the neces- sary traveling expenses, but not to exceed $500. “The county will also receive aid if a county librayian and if a direct- or of physical training are employ- ed. “The plan of the bill ig not to in- crease the appropriations of the leg- vide for new aids by decreasing the present flat aids approximately one- half and to distribute it in a way that will better serve the educational intqrests of the state. The so-called aid to ungraded elementary but provisions is made for an addi-| ungraded elementary (rural) school that is maintained in accordance with the standards to be adopted by the state board. This will permit a $200, | $50 more than at present. “The proposed bill ghould not be judged by the application merely of the entire state in mind. It is evi- dent to any fairminded person who studies this bill that it does what it promises to do by providing more aid than is available under existing law for thqse districts, many of which are found in Beltrami county whose tax levies are exceptionally high. Respectively, ‘' GEO. A. SELKE, Inspector. MRS TREICHEL ENTERTAINS Mrs. A. A. Treichel entertained at and one-half the mecessary traveling{ TH SELLER AJMO REVER READS W' ADS & LIKE W BUND MAN WHO WALKS O\DER A DOLLAR~ WE NEVER KNOWS WHETY WE ] her home at 1301 Bixby avenue Sun- day evening at a birthday surprise pparty for Mr. Treichel. A turkeyl dinner was served to 42 guests at| six o'clock. Games, cards and music | \were enjoyed throughout the even-‘ ing. Duties of Queen Ant. When the quéen ant lays her eggs the wprkers gather about and pick up each egg as it in'laid and carry it away to the \underground numrlel. where 1t. is watched and cared other workers, Sometimpe the qneen will escape her attendants. Away she [hurries, evidently bent on ‘playing a bit, but the mommt her disappear- ance is noted the ‘workers scurry out , in every direetion to find her, and “once she is located she is dragged back to the home by force and gets many a sharp nip on the way as punishment. | || The queen Is three or four times as “|large as the worker nnt Her first brood finds her busy Clenning up her house, digging a new room for a nurs- | ery, washing and cleaning lier babies with her tongue, und feeding them FOR RENT—S8 rooms at 116 Third{umver. this work is done by the street. Suitable for light hmlse- keeping. No objection to children| but no cats allowed. Geo. T. Ba- &er, - 2t3-3 working ants, and the queen has noth- ing to do but attend to the functions st motherhood, | IRELAND UNDER ALIEN RULE -~ —,“kw Power of the Danes Broken by Brian Boru in 1014—Normans Became Amaigamated. About 800 A. D., the pagan hosts of the Northmen and Danes fell on Ireland with flerce destruction. After a century of destruction, Irish kings led their people in a /succession ‘of wars, for the deliverance of their country, and Brian Borama, or Brian Boru (926-1014), king of Munster, by his great victory in the battle of Clon- tarf, on April 23, 1014, finally broke the power of the Danes in Ireland. In .| 1171 Ireland was invaded by the Nor- mans from England, in the time of Henry 1I, and its conquest began. “In Ireland,” to quote the words of Prof. Edward A. Freeman (1823-1892) “the than anywhere else, but in Ireland his power of adaptation caused him to sink-tn a way in ‘which he ‘sank no- where else. Whije some of the Nor- man settlers in Ireland went to swell the mass of the English of the Pale, others’ threw in their lot with the native Irish, and-became, in the well- known saying, “more Irish than the Irish themselves.—Detroit News, REFUSED HAND OF SULTAN Offer of Marriage by Ruler of Sulu Was Turned Down by Alice Roosevelt. T 1 The Moro Is not all bad. He has his godd points. There has never been 1 case where a Moro has murdered an American woman, and there are many American, women in Moroland. This abstinence, however, is not due to Moro chivalry, but to the' fact that in the Moro thought w‘)men have no souls. . Not that the believed soullessness ot the sex-keeps the Moro from be- ing a ladies’ man. In fact, he is in- clined to be very gullant. The fa- mous visit of the Taft party, ac- companied by the then Miss Alice Roosevey, wome years ago (and long to e remembered in the Phil- ippines), was attended by a char- acteristic exhibition of Moro gal- lantry. © ~ When this party visited TJolo—no trip to the islands would be complete withount visiting this picturesque Island—his royal high- ness, the sultan of Sulu, immedl- ately offered his hand In marriage to the daughter ‘of the President. Ie naddressed her as the Amerlcan princess, and the name of Princess Alice still clings to her in the Phil- Ippines, The fact that his highness already had a couple of dozen wives scattered around the town was no deterrent in case of a Mohammedan mounarch. Religion of Good Citizenship. “In China there existed in the past, and there are evidences that it is com- ing to life again, the religion of good citizenship,” says a writer in Asia Magazine. “That is to say, the Chi- nese theory is that a man does not need to feel the need of physical force to protect himself; he has seldom the need even to call in and use the physi- cal force of the policeman—of the state —to protect him. A man in China is supposed to be protected by the sense of justice of his neighbor; he is pro- tected by the readiness of his fellow- men to obey the sense of moral obliga- tiof. The ideal of Chinese civilization, therefore, Is that a man can not feel the need of using physical force to protect himself because he is sure that right and justice is recognized by all’ his neighbors as a force higher than physical force, and that moral obliga- tion as recognizéd by eyerybody fis something that must be obeyed.” Hygienic Sleeping Rooms. A sun-bath, at frequent intervals, is effective in keeping the bedding | healthy, sweet and wholesome. To this is_added, of course, daily airing | of the bed-clothes for not.less than two Hours. Eiderdown' quilts, though tempting to the eye of the housewife, are not as hygieni¢'a covering as the more easily washed. woolen blnnu:ts 1 As at least a third of our lives'is spent in the bedroom it behooves us to see that it js clean, airy and hygienic, otherwise refreshing sleep will be im- possible, and health will suffer. / Up to Mr:.._SIn'Qh. Jack was visiting a neighbor who | always had a_supply of home-made cookies on hand. She gnve himone, { which he ate; and Jack nsked for a cookie to bring to his mother. When he reached home he &mid: “Nother, Mrs. Smith suid she was sorry but | there was a bite out-of your cookie.” e Norman was more purél® a conqueror | "AMO PANS SHUAD BILLZ" ORODN! \Y PAYS FOR \XSELF, LIKE "W GROCER'S DELWERY FLWUER AND ~TH' PRINTSHOP LINOTNPE. ADVERTISING SELLS ENOVGH MORE GOO0S Y - KEEK KKK EKK K KKK KR * ‘. ... KITICHI Px KEKEK KKK ERKKEKKKRER Kitichi Farmers’ club will hold their yearly anniversary at the hon'A‘e- of their president, C. C. Smith, S: urday, March 5th.. A fine time is ‘ex- pected and:a big dinner will be served. Miss Ruby Henderson, having spent the weel: in Cass Lake-at her home, returned Sunday. She is keepmg books ather \father’s camp. Mrs. Henderson of Cass Lake vis- ited the past week at her husband’s sawmill and camp at Kitichi. Mr. Low of Cass Lake is spending a few 'days at the Henderson camp. The little children at the home ‘of Mr. and Mrs. Ingwal Gregerson, who have been very sick for the past two weeks, are getting along fine. Vergil Mahoney, who has been very sick the past week with pneumonis, is convalescmsi Miss Ro: Rny is visiting lnenda in Cass Lake this week. Mr. Smith was a Cass Lake caller Monday. Professor Baney spent the week end at his parental home in Black- Iso attended to business in Be- i and returned to his school du- ties by way of Cass Lake, where he had an appointment with C. C. Smith of Kitichi to meet him with team and 4and bob sled to’convey him back to his field of labors in Kitichi country. About 2 p. m. Monday, Feb. 28th, the peace and stillness of the air was brolen by the exhaust of a )wwer!ul gas engine, which made the noise from Mr. Henderson’s sawmill sound like a mother singing her sick baby to sleep. It threw all of the settlers of the lake country into a panic of fear, think- break upon them. But, when upon bended knees, as, they looked upwards for deliveranée grnm impending dan- ger, they beheld an airplane descend- ing upon them, ; new terror lay hold on their hearts:, The ‘women fled to shelter, in dug Siits and root cellars, ‘while the men flew to arms, grabbing rifles and shot guns from hooks where they had been rusting since last hunt- ing season, loaded with shell and buck shot; come to the defense of home and ‘country. They marched bravely down to the north shore of Kitichi lake It was at that point they expected the enemy to start the drive on land, as the plane had lit upon the icy sur- face of that body of water. But the enemy plane remained only long enough to land a lone passenger, who, as he advanced, proved to be ncne other than the person of our Professor Raney returning to hic du- ties at the Kitichi school. Mr. Baney said he enjoyed the trip out from Cass Lake very much in spite of the fuct that they got lost on the way out, tak- ing a turn over Lake Winnibigoghich exploring a few-hitherto undiscovered lakes, and finally getting his bearings when they made a landing on Moose Lake, off Newman’s point. We have been wondering what makes Newman’s point such a familiar land mark. In the meantime, what became of C. C. Smith? Well;-he did not get lost, but reports the re- turn trip very lonely without his’ school man. X i Independent. New Salesman (hotly)—*T will take orders from no man!” Salesmanager (coldly)—*“Yes, I noted that while you ‘were:on your trial trip,”~-Minneapolis Journal. Subseribe for The Da'ly . Ploneer. THESAMEIN . = ° TURTLE RIVER Turtle River Residents Speak Out for ing a great earthquake was about to|: the Welfare of the Public —_— |sa here in Bemidji; our friends there speak ‘out in the same glad, earnest way as so many grateful Bemidji men and- women have spoken ‘in these columns for years past™ Mrs. 0. W. Erwin, Turtle River, Minn., says: ‘‘Some three years ago {my kldneyl began to do their work poorly. I was s0 bad off, I thought I would die. My back was very weak jand I couldn’t bend over without be-) |ing in agony. The kidney secretions were scanty and contained sediment. My breath came in gagps and I often felt as though I was smothering. My |whole body bloated and I often lay awake half the night, gasping = for breath. ‘I was so discouraged I thought depth would be a relief. Noth- ing helped me and my life was one | constant round of suffering. 1 finally | began using Doan’s Kidney Pills and I am well and happy today. It-was Doan’s Kidney Pills that made the cure.” | OVER SIX YEARS LATER, Mrs. | Erwin_said: “The cure Doan’s K ney Pills ' made has been & permanent one, and I recommend them when< | ever I have a favorable opportunity.” 60c, at all lers. Foster-Milburn ‘Co » Migrs., Bulfalo, N, Y.—Adv. Z It is just the same in Tuartle River I HENS ADVERTISE - DUEKS DONY. Y WHO” ENTS . boek Characterofogy. To the layman it may seem possible task to learn all of the disclosed by the many parts of a hu- man being, and yet, through the work of the men who have made things their life study, the fundamen- tal principles of characterology can ber quickly learned land applied average business or professional man. Such a knowledge will enable- b\]slnecs mnen to choose their assoclates arid;em- ployees so that natural ability <will /§! harmonize with work in hand and every man will possess the precise fn- nate capacity which will enabl to become an expert in the ment to which he is assigned. Real Meaning of Thrift.. The thrifty man is not necegsarily Thrift means more than | It ‘embraces ot only | spending less than we receive, but ‘the a miser. hoarded dollars. investment of our savings in prises which yield returns not only to ourselves, but to the public at la Sotsilh; it Where there is a persistent cough or general rundown condition, there Scott’s Emulsion is a positive help. Scatt & Bowne, Bioomfleld, N.J. 30-23 & Co., Cadillac Motor Car WOMEN TO PARTICIPATEIN. . RABBIT AND CQYOTE HUNT < Parshall, N. D., March 2 men as well as rien will par an fm- things shall. aim, these | < by the c O‘U‘P.Q N’ Farmers: e ‘If you want DYNAMITE AT COST, cut out, }lgn and mail this coupon filled out at once.. i I barik at.... I will stump - I will brush I will need. 30%, .. fuse, .. e him depart- enter- rge. elgctric caps. | My railroad station is........cocceeeereeee My name is Sign and mail to A."A. Warfield, | Secretary, Beltrami-County Land Clearmz Asg'n., Bemidji, Minnesota, Odem Fummture i ‘a S]Lgn of Su Allsteelfurnitureia OberlinColleg Office. Alistoe! otfice furnituse used by such firms as J. P. Morgen Cb., Bush Termiinal Co., National City Bank:, Allsteel filing "cabinets can be> putyfo: “\gether in almost limitless combinations to) meet the exact needs of the ‘oneman busi-) ness as well as the requirements of the .bi ‘organization., You simply add_more. units. as your business warrants. Saves Valuable Space o Alisteel filing “cabinets save 15 t0 25% M space over wood cabinets, and have greater capacs ity. Allsteel is fire-resistant,” warp-proof, wear> Proof, rodent-proof, dust-proof and everlasting. ' . Look at desks, safes, counter height files and other units of Allsteel office furniture )the,eqmptm that belongs with sucgess. Xy PlONEER STATIONERY HOUSE Phone 799-J . UCCBSS At Comie in and examine the ‘Alisteef filing nmu.a = L cayo )flanned; by Mayor Brower of Par- Every rabbit and coyote with- in riding distance of Parshall is the MlNNBSOlA de

Other pages from this issue: