Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 9, 1921, Page 2

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L SRR YRV AR SN IRE Wy T WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH-9, 1921 BEMIDJ¥ DAILY PIONEE PUBLISHED EVERY'AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY | ' . THE BEMIDJI' PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. i \i ) . = ‘ / i © B CARSON, Presicent E. H. DENU, Sec. and Mgr. SHI." HIS HU”S[! p @ w. H‘AENWELL, Editor J. D. WINTER, City Editor | . D ——— i S i g ) & . Jeevons 2 vl b0 00 L 0 T T Rrtered toffice at Bemidji, Minnesota, as second-class matter, Ll f i s \lll:;:r Ac:t.ot Gongijm of Marc':'a. 1879, : SECRETARY OF WAR. , AN . attenti id to anonymous contributions. Writer’s name must : be e t::‘tlhu:eg?tlor. but mot necessarily for publication. Communica-| RAPID PHOGRES$ OF DENBY1 tigny for the Weekly Fioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday of exh week to insure publication in the current issue. . i | Chief. of the Navy was One of Its Pri- vates Less Than:Four Years Ago— | =% SCHEDULE OF BOUTS FOR e 150 gir Months ememeeeereeene e 260 057 cablnet are new to Washington | e lite, while some of them b .55 One Week .. & .l_fi fl‘hrgo Moxx»th: P 125, ¢ spent | in . 7 Il B . good part of their adult y s in t not £ them have spent the prosecution of tiviti Hughes, the new s ate ju s o p THE WEEKLY PIONEER-—Twelve pages, published every Thnr:du! :Il.g“{‘:fh:llu“, and sent postage paid to any address fcr, in advance, $2.00. | of them, for OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS S e b —_——— | their busi ROADS AND RUTS If the road-builders really want to tackle the }lighway: problem they might begin by taking a look at the map of the! United States. .. Thepew With all due praise to the states whose highway activity wus on the has been of a high order, the national plan must build from the | a fine hou outside in, and not from the inside out. So long as the problem | "f"f VRl k I - | is inspected from the viewpoint of individual states, just so nated for the presidency of the United s 4 A : 3 States in 1916 he up his Washin long will there be national highways that expire after crossing| ¢\ . sionc Knowing of course (ha = te when he ' occupield t the corner of Sixteenth | When B was nomi- | a0 the state line. . . 1 if he were eleeted he would move Into | The problem is not beyond the capacity of builders of ! the White Iouse, aud that if he were & reasonable intelligence, if once the dust of eloquence can be defexted he must sw York | laid. The boundaries of the United States are fairly well known, | w « his living g and there are certain rules which apply to any general scheme. i BN le that M. A 4 : | Hughes wishes he had kept hold on These rules include suggestive terminals, such as are repre- |\ = o "0 o of turning it over i ;ented_ in the first and obvious stage by New York and San! , another, the “another’ rancisco. being former United It needs no argument that wherever there is population! Jon W. Weeks of Ma there is needed transportation for it. Existing business deter-' seeretary of mines the first-lines, to which the whole country should be w ~'hmutlun '1_,« witnes ver x-‘; bound by tributary roads, sufficient of which retain the capacity m_m"” I:.IEL:\'fr ';\)r:»;:'nlj.:ll:/ml‘i “::]","_!;r::, to become primary roads when necessity arises. 0 pans Gt With the waterways the answer is still simpler. Wherever holding || there is a sizeable waterway there are cities on it; communities| ward to- always cluster near water. That these natural highways should day to be brought into usefulness wherever the traffic demands, goes; live, | for the saying. What is not available today can be used to-| D‘;}TY__“‘J‘)f"l""";"":,i‘:‘f,r":fi’fsff“’\;‘ morrow; the water, in a general way, will still be there. SI”_"‘(‘I':; ol Ml Rl The difficulty in road building is not so much one of men, | youm in Washington #ts a member o as of words. The highway only paved by good intentions re-| congress lived in a modest house on turns no traffic report; but it is understood to be extravagantly | Counecticut avenue. Since that day resurfaced continually. The first essential to road construction| the world prospered Mr. Denb, is to get out of the rut. and if he wants to he can take ¢ mansion and not worry when rent s E £ I ——— 5 £ thaehinees o || PREVENTATIVE FOR LYNCHING e O s The anti-lynching bill, providing that the next of kin of a' he will scek an inconspi | . person who suffers death by lynching may begin suit against comfortabie but not palatial. . B the county in which the act occurs for $7,500, has been rec- The late Tieut. Adna Chaftee, T L ommended for passage by the house committee on public wel- (&'t "0 LOF T 0 P ior JOE QUINN i fare. of the United Stotes nrmy, but it took £9 GUNNER i And then when you add the costs of the suit to the penalty | m,.‘.hL(.\-.-‘,-x urf. s "m{‘d ;‘llmlcfv 1|I|m 1 AL ARNEY ' VD f Mi Ql H provided it will make quite a tidy little sum the county would| journey. The n ary of the ] of Internaticnal Falls ° [ inneapelis n this case’ husetts, the So today || Hughes., Tt a place in Washington to L ‘rmmuuuumumnmmumuinumwu [ 0 T T T e avmy. rose from the ranks ¢ e i be liable for. Weli, it might help. Everybody’s business might| navy, who to.all intents and purposes | —10 RGUNDS— @ be: somebody’s business then. i Is the commanding oficer of dur sc forces, made the trip from private in | MOSTLY “EXERCISE” i :h.- Eanica ‘!n his 1\rnsv‘1]|t position in | & | less than four years, therel We understand that the senate has a "Bl To define mening | JOE SHARKEY TED O’'RIELLY to define nsning | inx the record, but of course Denl % = - i of Marble b as “exercise” instead of “sport.”” The point is that “‘exercise’! case was exceptionul and the of aneapolls will not come under the ban of the Sunday hlue laws, while the | cimstances attending it were excep- 1‘ —-6 ROUNDS— | “sport” would be a crime. The author of this bill can be no " ! i friend of the fish. Just as if the fish didn’t have enough trouble s‘.,'?;::m SR ¢ now dodging fish hooks on Sunday without making it any harder 4uq for yea | for them. No doubt about it being ‘“exercise’” for the fish. velt body Wonder where the senate “dads” would put golf? Probably as| Detroit the y¢ | { “necessary labor.” entered the w well. One 0O——— loane, a member of the | e of the Unlted States || r of the Roose- || S ~ 0, e seaiis o | TOMMY TIBBETTS VS° —6 ROUNDS— RUBE CARREVEAU of International Falls Y the United [Statcy | i of Bemidji He knew ‘Denby | Denby met Sloane ad \id, “Yimmy, come over with me nnd ’ . me enlist in the marine corps.” UNKNOWN Sloane thought of course that Denby HARRY PETERSCN VS 3 invitation to| . g @ . Joking o) of Bemidji see him enli nerely another way || i his friend to Tunch. Denby || i —4ROUNDS— time was forty-six ) i s vo loft the oftice bu 4 gether and Slonne was\somewhat tounyded when Denby did hit the g PHYSICAL FITNESS FOR MARRIAGE i If a bill now recommended to the senate for passage be-| comes law, before marriage licenses can be issued both parties| to the contract will be required to appear before the court in person and sign a statement to the effect that they are free: frqm social diseases. Senator Guilford, the author of the bill,| * said we should at least be as careful mating human beings as| if we are in mating livestock. B LT ri T FLE T L e PUL . l " EXTRA SPECIAL ATTRACTION ’VS JIViMY DELANEY of St. Paul = — = —— o | to a marine corps recruiting office | T T T AT T W arTrrTharsy | 10re inside of three-quarters of an i I | & hour he had passed the physiea | had convinced the authorities that his : OVERHEARD BY EXCHANGE EDITORY cuaracier was all right, and he was 5 || duty sworn in to the jrine corps as i SARARASARNALIAAALEARENSALAAMIAMIRSANALIRARRARAANRLAR AR LR RRARRRRI AR, A | A Private in the vanks, £ Schools' of South Dakota are to be fully Americanized, a law requiring | Bird Lovers Like Weeks. that all subjects taught in either public or parochial schools must be in the i English language, the bill having been signed by the governor. That is as | it should and must be all over this great United States.—Stillwater Daily | “::::x’:;‘t:nn"tfn(’”;‘l‘m -;;)"" o vena 2] [ e of represen- || Jehn W. Weeks, the new scerefary of war was, with Endwin Denby, dled “spr Gazette. S e fatives which was appointed to draw || , —6ROUNDS— B An onion grower announces that a craze for onions has developed with # resolution of censure of Presidgnt | 3 prohibition. Here is the long sought proof that prohibition makes for a| Roosevelt who. in an fronically humor- had s | e did not like. Both Denby || The Winnebago Enterprise remarks that “the cditor is generally filled nnd Weeks were dood friepds of i | stronger nation.—Brainerd Dispatch. ous: W 1 something which | i the hou with hope.” Hope is a very fire thing, but a nice juicy steak would be more ' Roosevelt, although neither voted for “filling” to an empty stomach.—Mankato Daily Free Press. him in 1912, ! - . i = Bird lovers generally all over the ! The New York Federation of Labor disapproves of the Rockefeller gift United States lold Weeks in affection | qi of seventy million dollars to the state for educational purposes. If John D.' for the position he took in congres i h‘us another seventy million that he wishes to dispose of, he might phone n the campaign for a federal law | Governor Frazier, who could make use of it.—Grand Forks Herald. whieh would protect the song bhirds of ; ok sk b ol The world has whipped itself to a standstill, and the next step is to take "y ie! e away its guns.—St. Cloud Journal Press. . e new postmaster £ 4 ) Seats on Sale Monday, March 7t.h at Board- E: man’s Drug Store—Bemidji 3 " Mail Orders Accepted When Accom- 3 panied By Money Order or Cash general, lived in Washington, or lenst made his headquarters her of hair tonic dyes was introduced in the senate by Senator Fred Bessette, [T0M (he thme that he was appointed St. Louis county. The bill provides that no hair dye shall be sold without a | ‘hairian of the Republican national doctor’s prescription. Sounds lilxe the eighteenth amendment.—Mankato | Committee in 1919 until the Re- Daily, Free Press. publican convention was held las when Le moved over to New | it Is this another blow at personal liberty? A bill to regulate the sale VT VIR, Vv S— ! June, Von Tirpitz having failed to win the war with the submarine naturally York | does not think much of that weapon.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. For a long time Iayve conducted a —— Bible class in his home tewn of Sulli-; b w0 g th ]:o:t You '§H°'>' Why van, Ind. He is a deep Bible 1 PRICES: $1 00 . me reason for the shortage of print paper,” says the Pilot Grove and the story is told of him t when g l;eccrd, is that since prohibition everybody has turned over a new leaf.”— Warren Gamaiiel Harding was nomi- $3'00 $2'00 ‘ : - - Baudette Region. nated for the presidency and his full . Plus War Tax . — e __ ./ name beeame known to most people A telephone company in the east announces with pride it employes 15,598 for he first time, Hayvs was the only operators. But it doesn’t explain why they all go out to dinner when you punin a roumtul uf’pnh(irluns who AR TR coa il ‘amsbods who the iies § THE FASTEST FIGHT CARD EVER STAGED IN NORTHWESTERN MINNESOTA There is no union in Sing Sing, but the prices of goods made " Gamaliel was. ‘;‘n the prison have been reduced without a corresponding wage cut. Per- E ' it 15 only because the eurrent rate of pay | d a half cents a day. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE E !!!!!!!!!5,,“,,.,,!!!!!!!!!!..........‘.;‘W%Mwlm recause the ¢ ‘en l'fl»CO pay 18 one. and a half cents a day i i DMLY P]ONEER‘ 19 L1, 13 AR -~ ~~St. Paul Pioneer Press, K aanranann: ancan;

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