Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 1, 1921, Page 6

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—— LIMITED : Fords Are Safe. An organization of women .in the United States' is said to be opposed to automobiling for pleasure on Sun- day. It’s a sure cinch they can’t get after the Ford owners on that score. —That’s About All— | A la Steamer Tt is said. that coal has dropped | fifty cents a ton in Pennsylvania. | Even if it has, the chances are that | the verification of the drop will not | reach this section of the country un- til navigation has opened again, and will probably be, back to its old price again, 1 —1It Usually Is— Presto Chango Under a new arrangement, it is reported the styles are to be cabled || from Paris to New York. Then it will take a gown only a few minutes to go out o fstyle, while now it takes at least four or five days. —Won’t That Help?— 1 . Where Do the Spats Go? MARKETS HIDES |Cow hides, No. 1 “What do the goloshes do in the| summer time?” Or where do the [Leacol ook - spats go? Maybe the baby gets a few. g s ~—You Know Why— Set Them to Thinking | “p ike It” 2l % z i a ma: lz;{):s Ie;‘lbeoxlf)f g:gsytgita‘;};if Chicago, April 1._PotatoNrecelpts, quet home to his wife she sits m‘ound!33 o CALS Market “gm]i]y:' lo%hcrr:n and worries for a week for fear he| Vhites, sacked and_bulk, - $1. 0 ias heen up to something, Probably | 3L-15; Minnesota kings, sacked, $1; if he docswt she knows he is down |Red River Ohios, $1.25 to $1.40. to nothing. | —Commonly Called Broke— The question has been asked,| " 2¢- “What does a fly do in wintes time?” Bl e e 2o hat we would rather know is| . skins, No. 1, 1b . .5e-6c 40c-50c POTATOES B e o la sort of millenium, with m:u(in}um Open Competition privileges and a minimum of obliga- Department stores | £ ., |tions and restrictions. i % have found il| " “Wwe don’t want more liberty, we MICKIE, THE PRINTER’S “DEVIL GIVE UP2 WELL, TTHE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ANEWSPAPER MAN AND A P\G \S THAT THE PIG PEN AND THE NEWSPAPER | mno longer necessary to play up at-| tractive hosiery displays in their win- dows, since they have found so much competition on the streets. Not hard to find, either. The competition is getting higher every day. want more money for our olive cil,” |is the context of an actual message received by King - Constantine in Athens, shortly after his return, when he promised revision of the con- |stitution along more democratic . authority of none. ~Wheie to Next?— lines. " WashiAlamize Assertion ashin, ;A ician | Q savs csareiton win xain che sempicn. GERMANY IS DUMPING ion. Smolke always has that effect on| G%Ds lN'l‘O BELGIUM paint. r —Look and See— | . (United Press Staff Correspondent) . One Version Brussels.—(By Mail)—In a for- . According to some of the fish stor-! mal note addressed to the Belgian ies already being peddled around in;government, the Belgian Federation contemplation of the coming fishing|of Contractors charges Germany with season, a stranger might be lead to|perfecting a gigantic system of dump-! belxpvc that he wo‘uld‘ have to hide ing. This is declared to be so for- behind a tree to bait his hook. | midable that no industry outside of —AIl Right for Suckers— | Germany can fight against it unless Fusk £a Compromie ‘d!:lti:.lm:;;‘e:ncgnd rapid action are Did you ever notice that some| Tt is further charged that the women always pick out a very ex-|whole financial power of the German pensive hat so that their husbands|gate has been placed at the disposal will refuse to buy it and then they|gs' ¢ 7 dp ) bli pGer- can compromise on the ome they | i (ETMAN INCUSHY bgtayeingl? Jougr I man firms to grant the most liberal thought they liked the best? I ki i i 4 | kind of terms in the way of long time —It Is Said They Do— | credits. This is protection the Bel- | Not Fishing for Fish gian contractors declare. The time is approaching when those _ TBIS Incident arose hetween the who do not “fish for fish” will be Belgian government and the Belgian getting out their $20 rod and $20 Federation of Contractors, when the But they always find it ha,d\government recently m:celptgd a Ger- to explain to other people that they!man proposal to supply folling stock don’t fish for fish. ¢ fu!i the Belgian state railways. : .2 T 9. ncorporated in the protest is a de- What Do They Figh, for?— mu;miz\tion of govv:mn;ental policy in y {ordering German goods at an appar- GREEKS LONG DREAM {ent saving of 18,000,000 francs when, |it is declared, Belgium will, in the CANNOT BE REALIZED 1o run, stand to lose 21,000,000 |francs by rcason of unemployment Smyene, Asia Minor.— (B Mail to| " T ‘rotest dectares it s o foee h“lfli’d PT('S.gl)j—*(-TECCC may extend policy to consider solely and wholly ierl doun(lallgs'~—on paper—so as to the mere question of lowness of price inclu e_nraftlcdlly all of the ex-Turk- | and quickness of delivery and makes ish Levant; she may occupy the en- g plea for governmental istance tire coastline of the Acgean and Mar- | for” strictly mational industries, now s Bond:: with the Yt | for st.rmtl.v national mdu'stnes, now commital assistance nfatch“?ll(‘)r “Ion-lsl'lfrerm’: Trom i seareity of Lo the long-dreamed of Hellenizatio m;‘em orders, thereby widiing local el e eniza l(m'_o ‘buslness all the more valuable. St impossihilit T empire Is a “r-i By \\vm:(hm: governmental orders This is_ the f;i;“ onvicti P {to a foreign country, the protest Iinhte;wc.l il ‘f_""‘l} u‘m of en-/points out, Begium is deprived of a e otficizl:l:su“i(nwg;n rr’:xrckcuk ‘\'uluub.]e source of revenue at a time (Sla): The situation in the yclly of when'it s badly negded. myrne, for instance, is pointed to as :1: cxarpplte ofs what t}lle Greeks are ;PLANT]NG SAMPLES FoR Ip against. myrne has a popula- tion, roughly estimated, at 350,000.‘ Of this number, fully one-third nrc‘ EXCAVATORS OF FUTURE pure Turkish. Greeks, Armenians| and Jews, evenly’ djvided, make up | London.—(By Mail to United the other two-thirds, including, of |Press)—Four thousand years hence course, the scattering of Europeans|—Perhaps more—some enterprising and Levantines. excavator may dig up a wonderful With the fatalism of his race, the |~find,” showing the customs of the native Turk has resigned himself to |People of this country. his fate. He realizes that the Otto-| Whether the excavator digs it up man empire, so far as Smyrne i§ con- |OF N0, the evidence will be there, be- cerned, is no more. He has seen the |CaUse at present quite a number of sultan gradually and irrevocably People are busying “planting” it. pushed back, back, back, into Asia|Should the excavator happen on it, the past two decades. After ten/however, he will discover from docu- years of war, the average Musselman |ments that in the year 1921 a build- is not sorry. However, he will not ing had been erected in Aldwych by co-operate with the invaders. He ac- the Bush Terminal company and with cepts the present state of affairs be- | the thoughtful idea of perpetuating cause it is. | the memory of the civilization of the So far as the Turk is concerned,|20th century they had hidden in re- the Greeks are not worried. = They|inforced concrete beneth the founda- have seen the Mohammedans gradual- | tions, samples of the contemporary ly forced out of Greece, Macedonia, | merchandise. Thrace and Bulgaria. Civilization safety razor will prove to the and the Turk do not mix. In a few|bearder soldier of 4,000 years hense vears they expect the overflow from that there was a time when men old Greece and the islands to crowd' carefully removed all hair from their out the native. They point to Eng-|faces. A bottle of pickles 4,000 years land’s colonial policies as an example| old may puzzle him some, and there’s and justify their aspirations under no telling what he’ll make out of a the “March of Civilization.” | pre-war continental railway guide. It is the Levantine, the ranegade| H. G. Wells has been asked to com- Grce]g, the Armeni and the Jew pile a list of things to be buried for that is the una: able factor in the benefit of this far anticipated ex- this part of the w van-| cavator and if the chest contains all tine alone is enougl wurage the articles suggested by Wells, the those W_ho hope to see Smyrna and amazed finder will believe himself in the Asia Minor coastline become|a new Alladin’s cave. purely Hellenic again—if it ever was.| the Levantine owes allegiance to no|plained that in an excavation which country and refuses tg recognize the is made air-tight and water-tight by | . Under the Otto- concrete several feet thick articles| man rule he was virtually unmolested. might by preserved for hundreds or | Under inter-allied control he expecis|thousands of years. 1 ver w. An official of the Bush Terminal| Non-national and usually multi-racial,| company, outlining the scheme, ex- MAN LIVES BY WS PEN R Cheap Light. Sclence and Invention describes a re- cent achievement of a French scientist, who Has successfully tried out in his house a scheme for operating electric lights without cost. Unon his water-supply pipe he has fitted a high-speed water turbine, which dr s a dynamo, charging a storage battery. Every time a faucet is turned on in the house the stream of water s put to work at loading the battery, which furnishes current for the lights. “It Is simply utilizing en- ergy that Is ordinarily wasted,” says the inventor.—Philadelphia Ledger. Omaha Big Butter Maker. More than $25,000,000 worth of but- ter was manufactured in-Omaha dur- the members of which report that the city in Nebraska still retains its position as the chief city of this industry In the United States. given by the chamber for recent years show a steady increase since 1914 when the government census showed that the production for that year was $4,840,849. GRINAGER’S suNsHINE GROGERY Carry-a-Bit—Save-a-Bit 1 Try a Pound of Sunshine| Brand Coffee — It Brings| the Smile of Satisfaction Sugar, 10 Ibs ............ $1.00| Lard, 10 Ibs, bulk.....$1.69 Palmolive Soap, 12 bars Lenox Soap, 24 bars..$1.00 \ 3 1b ... 28¢| Rolled Oats, | Campbell’s Beans and Soups, 3 for .......... 37¢ Tomatoes Peas Corn Cut Wax Beans Galvanic Soap, spe- cial 10 bars .......... 59c|” Peaches Apricots Pineapple |Blackberries 3for §1.00 55¢ Apples, in gallon ..... Lippincott’s 8-0z Cat- sup; 2 for .. 25¢| \ Spinach, 2% \ cans, 8.for ...cccoinee 33c| \ Spaghetti Macaroni Whole Dried Peaches, 2 1bs for ..l c Beats All Coffee, 10 1) 1 R A S All Kinds— Hay by the Bale or Carload. SUNSHINE =) By Charles ¥ ® Westein ‘Newspapet "Unidar, * JUST WANT TWA BOSS, WHIKS SPRING WS | DIFFERENE BETW! 0N W BOSS! ‘W ME AND'A — JBEY HELL THIK N SRR )L The condition of C. F. Hagaman of Nymore is reported to be improved. | Mr. "Hagaman suffered. a pardlytic stroke recently and was taken to the |Northern Pacific hospital at Brain- erd. On Tuesday he was brought back and #s nowat his home. This convert .more sinners in‘a week than “pancake” hat and clerical collar can influence in a month. The younger clergy are largely men who did their bit in France and elsewhere and who have got to know human nature in- an orthodox black coat complete with |is the third stroke Mr. Hagaman has had and his condition is very serious. He is unable to talk and can take very little nourishment. CLERGYMEN AND YELLOW ‘WAISTCOAT IS QUESTION London. (By Mail to United Press.) —Should a clerglman wear a-yellow waistcoat? This question is vexing the minds of the Lower ‘Hpuse Convocation &t Westniinster. Canon Wéod pointed »ut that cne of the evil results ‘of th2 war was that the younger clergy were aban- dcning the ordinary distinctive dress. “At @ church-gathering not long 2go,” he said, ““I saw a young priest in secular garb with a flaming yellow waistecat. It excited my amazement. It was an outward and visible sign The figures on butter production as'| to failure to recognize that he is 2 be- ing apart from other men, being a man of God, not a man of the world.” However, according to a number of timately through common sufferings. They claim to be able to judge of the psychology of sinners by mingling with them as “man to man,” Tegard- less of garb, than' by donning the black and pious air which more often than not scares would-be penitents away.f Many present day clergymen say that some of their best work is ef- fected by going into saloons and talk- ing with their recalcitrant flock over a good, homest glass of beer. FOR SALE—Timothy seed. I have about 30 sacks, For 10c¢ per pound. Sacks free in 100 pound lots. 9c per pound in 100 pounds lots it vou furnish your own sack. Carl Opsata, phone 4/F-2, Rte. 2, box —————————n | [ Complete Line of Feed of| |Flour— Garden Seeds and|Zi the younger clergy who expressed their views, a yellow waistcoat can| = 27. 6t4-7 beautiful and accu- rate watch “at “its price of © $40 (less 7 allowance on your watch). 17 Jewel, Extra- Thin Chesterfie;% in gold filled case ghar- anteed for 20 years. An exceptionally Traifeg?l’fi Your Old Watch ! Get A New South Bend ~ Watch No longer ény reason why you should carry a watch that doesn’tgmeasure up to your highest ideals of accuracy and beauty. Now you:can own a handsome late .mod_gl South Bend’ Watch without scrapping your old timepiece. All you need do is to bring your watch here and trade it in on any South Bend Watch in our store.. we'll alfow you a lib- eral price for the old wateh and sell you the new one at the standard price. No extra charges of any kind. No delay waiting to sell your watch. THE GREATEST OPPORTUNITY EVER OFFERED TO WATCH BUYERS This is an offer of almost unheard ‘of liberality. We can extend it to only a limited number of buyers. The first ones who call will be the ones who get the benefit of it and ‘we reserve the right to cancel the offer at any time without notice. Remember, this applies to any South Bend Watch in our stock. Railroad watchesy Handsome, Extra-Thin 12 size Chesterfields; 16 size commercial grades—15,17, 19 or 21 jewel. Any grade case; enar_nel, metal or luminous dials.” We are limiting the offer to South Bend Watches because we are featuring “South Bends.”. We have found them unexcelled for beauty and accuracy and we want to get hundreds more of them into the poc}(ets of men in this vicinity for the advertising value to this store. THE CHANCE OF A LIFE-TIME We have never made such an offer before. We may never repeat it. Now is your chance to get rid of your present watch at a fair value and own-a watch that you.will be proud to carry. You Mus Act Quic ‘Geo.T.Baker & Co. The HALLMARK Store Bemidji, Minn. To be sure of getting in on this limited time offer you must take advantage of it quickly. Come in today and let us make you a price on your old watch. Aw Boss, That. Aint-no.Way.to. Ac ) NEVER €OLLE SEE| ANY Y OUR SPECIAL THIS WEEK ‘ IS PLUM PUDDING and WHITE HOUSE a two-layer:Fruit Brick Langdon’s Sanitary Ice Cream ‘is sold by all leading confectioneries in the city Langddn Mfg.' Compam_lf Flour, 98-1b sack Satisfaction Guaranteed Rice, large clean kernels, 3 1bs. ... .. Crackers, in caddies, perlb ......... Libby’s Milk, small can, 4 for ....... Libby’s Roast Beef, 12-0z size, per can. Veribest Apricots, in heavy _syrup, Né). 2cans,percan. ... .. ,25.“; 2cans for 45c Rosedale Peaches, large cans, 3 cans. . $1.00 Blue Label Strawberry and Raspberry Jam, 1670z jar,perjar ........... 43c Catsup, 16-0z bottles-.............. 25¢c Quart cans Pure Apple Cider, pér can. 20c Whole Peaches, dried, perlb ........ 14c Quart Mason Jars of Honey ........ Douglas Cooking Oil, quart jars. . ... Half gallon .......... cieeean . 8125 Compound in 4-lb pails ......... Large Picnic Hams, per 1b Kalsomine, in5-Ib packages, white, a package i ok St G Colors, a package .............. Floor Varnish, per gallon .......... Floor Varnish, per quart . Brooms,edch ... ..........o..u.. Clifford & Co. 23c

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