Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 20, 1921, Page 8

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e | PAGE EIGHT — - THE Gy BiLL BUMP HAS:SWORN OFF SWEARING - SINCE CENTURY, THURSDAY NIGHT WREN HIS SMALL SON GOY| LIMITED La Libertad We are informed that the sales- man of teday is the most independent man in the world. It is said that he is not taking orders from anybody. ~—One, Way to Look at It— How Come? St. Joseph, Missouri, must be in a class with fabled Sodom and Gomor- rah when it comes to general wick=d ness. At a recent Sunday evening seryfice this sign aderned a church: “Evening service, 7:30. of sermon: ‘Where Millions Sin." Get the habit. All are welccme,” —Right at Home— | { | i Subject | i | i The Best Way “Mother Falls Unconscious,” rcz\dsf 2 a headline in an advertisement. If| anyone was to ask our opinion, we| would say that is the best way to fall. | Then you won't know whether you | are hurt or not. | —Not Subconscious— Sir, the Detail Is Formed At the mecting of the local guar- antors of the summer chautauqua,| held at the association rooms Friday | night of last week, there were many distinguished men present. Included ! in the list were the juvenile court judge, the president of the Bemidji Gas company, the president of the| Chautauqua association, the judge of!| probate, Earl A. Munger, J. E. Har-| ris,, the circuit manager of the chau-| tauqua and the manager of the gas| company. Three answered “Here.” —The Other One Called the Roll— Picturesk A Port of Missing Men Here’s one port of missing men soon afler they reach home after working hours. Still another is in the ccllur: One thing about the warm weather is that now you don’t have to wait until Saturday night to take 2 bath. ¢ —You Don’t Have to— Red Pep’s Philosophy Red Pep says: “Remember, the world owes you a living, but it’s up to you to wol- lect.” “Here’s to two Lirds! The turkey on your table and the eagle in your pocket. “A fly ball is apt to be safe when two players chasc it.” “When times are good we are worked to death, and when times are bad we are starved to death.” —A Cat’s Life— WARFARE IN IRELAND BREAKING ALL RULES (Continued From Page 1) ish government has publiely ac- knowiedged to 'be a war,” cannot L Sinn Fein in the morning and at night and ride about openly in automobiles with their wives in the, afternoon. There is no other term than war for the fight in Ireland. But it is war without a parallel---consisting of cpen fights, open lootings, open, of- ficial' incendianism, ambushes and cold-hlooded murder that respect | neither age nor sex. | Each side can explain without ap-| parent embarrassment its acts---or if | it cannot explain them disclaim them, i ! 7 TURTLE RIVER TEAM PLAYS DOUBLE.HEADER SUNDAY | Turtle River was the scene of two| games of baseball Sunday afternoon. The township of Northern crossed bats with the fast Turtle River team fuul finished up with a score of 2 to 1 in favor of the visiting team. Turtle River then played Sugar Bush town- ship and defeated them 2 to 1. A| large crowd witnessed the games. t ENGLISH LUTHERAN Y. P.5. | ENTERTAINS AT LAWN PARTY | Th.o Young People’s society of the! English Evangelical Lutheran church entertained about 80 guests of the | State Teachers college at a lawn| party on Sunday evening near the stsl;sxppi dam. The features of tl\ef evening were the weiner roast and | the academic round-table talk led by Rev. E. W. Frenk. | | Prizes Offered for Best Letters great American |Problem that has § MARKETS % HIDES Cow hides, No. 1.. Bullghides, No. 1.. Kipp hides, No. 1, 1b. Calf skins, No. 1, 1b. Deacons, each ... Horse hides, large.. PHOTOPLAY CRITICS TO TAKE PART IN CONTEST/ on Ending of “Mid- summer Madness” Are you a good photoplay critic? Can you write a good letter? Have you a vivid imagination? 1If the an- swer is ‘“‘yes” to all these questions and you are willing to devote just a little time to writing a certain kind of letter to the Daily Pioneer, you will stand a good chance to win a cash( prize of either $3 or $2, or a prize of $2 worth of Elko theater ‘tickets. Besides, it will be fun to compete, and you'll be exerciging your writing ability. “Midsummer Madness,” a special Paramount picture and said by Ar- thur James, editor of Motion Pic- ture World, to be *‘the greatest legi- | timate dramatic production the screen hag ever known,” will be the feature attraction at the Elko the- ater TFriday, Saturday and Sunday, June 24, 25 'and 26. General news concerning this picture will appear in a special “Midsummer Madness” section of the Daily Pioneer 'Wednes- day, June 22. “‘Midsummer Madness” presents a | been faced by | countless' married couples, posybly by many right here in Bemidji. Is the ending of the screen story true.to life?- Is it the way you would have | ended it had you written the scen- anlo? Is the ending satisfactory to the extent of leaving the spectator with a gcod taste in his mouth and having caught the moral which the tale points out. The Elko theater management is anxious to know your opirion of this ending and so has offered the above mentioned prizes under thu| auspices of the Daily Pioneer. First| eee the picture, then write your let- ten to the “Midsummer Madness Ed- | itor,” Daily Pioneer. There are noj regtyictions as, to the length of your letter, but all letters must be receiv- ed at the.Daily Pioneer office by 6 p. m. of Wednesday, June 29. They| will be read and judged immedintely thereafter, and the judges will be H. 7. Mitchell, Miss Ida Virginia Brown, | and J. D. Winter. LETTER OF CREDIT FORGER ARRESTED AT MINNEAPOLIS (By United gress) Minneapons, June 20.---Dan Mor- rizey, wanted for forging a large |amount on a letter of credit from a Spokane bank was arrested here yes- terday. He was registered under the rame of D. Kenyon of Billings, | Mont. With him was a woman whom he sald was his bride. v Morrizey is said to have obtained the letter of credit. from the First National Bank' of Spokane and after changing the amount he obtained money about five times from Mon- tana and ldaho banks. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS WANTED---Kitchen girl, Ralph’'s Cafe, 215 2nq street. 2t6-21 WANTED---Waitresses at Markhai Coffee Shop. 3t6-22 $25. REWARD ---For information leading to conviction of party who teok money from the desk in the Frank Glombuski barber shop be- tween Saturday night, Jume 11th and Monday morning, June 13th. MINNESOTA HIGHWAYS IN GOOD CONDITION, St. Paul, June 20.-~Good, smooth | condStions prevail on the higgest part ©of Minnesota’s 7,000 mile system of | drunk highways, according to the | weekly bulletin issued today by the| te highway d: ‘Mord ‘than 1,200 men: and 25 fleets of tract irucks arve | now on the job, and with favorable | weather conditions are making mark- ed {improvement in the general con- dition of trunk routes,”” said W. F.| ‘Rosenwold,’ chief maintenance engi- neer: The reports direct from sup-i | I ‘ ‘erintendents in 16 districts covening the ‘entire siate substantiated sy 3t6-22 FOR SALiz---{leavy horses. During .the week commencing June 20th, we will have two carloads good big horses at.the City Livery, Bemidji, for sale. These horses have been working on our Red Lake aperat- tion. As nwe are overstocked, we will sell you what you want at the right price. International Lum- ber Co. v 3e6-27 WANTED---Kitchen girl at Vickers hetel. 2t6-21 WANTED---One or two house maid at once. Apply at New Kaplan flats. 6-20t1 Troppman’s ~ downstairs store- brown kid one strap pumps at $4.95 3t*22 Vade Cary recently sold his 40- thelacre farm in Rockwood township to _ ‘A, H, Wenzel of Devils Lake, N. D, LOSY AY TH' CHAUTALDQUA.. WHEN “W' PORE LVL FELLER FOUND_ BIL\. AGAIN, HE CRIED SO VOUL COULLD HEAR WIN ALL OVER W' TENY, | |{"pAPA, WHERE 1M MELL HANE NOL BEENZ" | ROBS OTHER BIRDS OF PREY “Frigate Pelican” Secures Its Food Chiefly by Forcing Its Weaker Brethren to Disgorge. The frigate bird, also called the man- of-war hawk and the “frigate pelican,” Is a sen bird, so called from its attacks on other birds. This bird, very large | and with black plumage, is capable of very powerful and rapid flight. It sometimes measures ten feet from tip to tip of its extended wings. On ac- count of its immense extent of wing and its dashing habits, it has been called the swiftest bird .that sweeps the seas. The frigate bird is a tropical sea bird of two species. The larger ranges all round the world within the tropics; the smaller is found only near the | eastern seas from Madagascar to Mo- luccas and southward to Australin. Both specles breed in large colonies, building their nests on rocks, high cliffs ar lofty trees on uninhabited islands. The birds often fly far out to sea, but most of the time they re- main pear shore. The frigate bird’s aerial evolutions are extremely graceful and it soars to great heights, It is sald never to dive for its prey, but to seize fishes only when they appear at the surface or above it. Flying fishes form a great part of its food. This bird of prey also pursues gulls and terns and eats the fish it forces tyem to disgorge. The male acquires under its bill a bright scurlet pouch which is capable of in- tlation, HOUSED IN OLD BUILDINGS Financial - Institutions of Yorktown, Virginia, Do Business Among His- toric Surroundings. Within 20 miles of where the first English settlement in America was made at Jamestown is the scene where Capt. John Smith records the story of his rescue by Pocahontas, the daughter of. the Indian chief, Powha- tan. Within a circle of 20 miles is to be found the oldest Protestant church in America; the kitchen where Martha Washington cooked in good colonlal style; the college which has graduated three presidents; Bruton charch, in which more men- of his torical impertance have worshiped than ‘in any other church in America —uand Yorktown, where Cornwallis surrendered to Washington. Although Yorktowa has a popula- ticn of less than two hundred, it has two banks, both of which age working fn what are probahly the two oldest bulldings used for banks in America. One of these banks, operating under state and trust company laws, is housed in the historic oldest custom- heuse bulit in America—erected in 1715. Here the ships for Philadelphia waqre once compelled to enter and clear. Here at one time was the gath- ering place of the financiers of the early colonists. Wall street has tak- en away ‘the financlers, but has left the same old -building with its same old walls of English brick, some 24 by 40 fect square and two stories high. Cavnival Festivities, Carnival festivities originated in the Roman Catholic couutries of Earope, where they were celebrated, especial- 1y in Rome and Nnples, with great mirth and freedom during the week before the beginning of Lent. Mardl Gras (literally “Fgt Tuesday,” so called for the French practice of pa- rading a fat ox, “boeuf gras,” during the celebration of the day), or Shroye Tuesdny, is the last day of -the car- nival. The festivities ‘were flrst in-: troduced into New Orleans in.1833; by | one of its French citizens, Mr..Marig- ny, and for many years they. consisted of promiscuous maskers - -roaming through the streets of the city, indulg. ing In various kinds of amusements, fun and folly. ————e Oldest Crown Jewel a Sapphire. Ouly a few of the early British royal jewels survive in the present regalla, The oldest of these is the sapphire . of ‘Edward the Confessor, which was originally. set in his coro- nation ring, It was buried with him, in his shrine in Westminster Abbey, but in 1101 the shrine was broken open and this and other jcwels re- moved. - The sapphire is in the cross on the top, of the king's state crown. Legend has it that St. John once ap- peared before the Confessor as a pil- grim, and that the monarch gave him the ring, which was returned later. ‘The stone is reputed to have the pow- er of curing sciatica and rheumatism, but has not been used for this pur- E VA HEAR SOME FUNNY ~TALKERS ON “W'. K SYREEY, LIKE TH' FARMER WHO SA\D, “WELL, | GOY YO GO HOME AND NO. SUBSTANCE TO DREAMS Writer Gives Reasons for Her Refusal to Have Any Belief in Common Superstitions. ‘The mind during sleep reminds me of a naughty child, writes Marion Holmes in the Chicago Dally News. With a normal person during waking hours reason controls it and- when it seems inclined to let loose..a foolish train of thought rebukes it with “Nonsense ! behave yourself!” But when reason goes to sleep the 'mind has.seasons of wild capering. .It makes you do things that when awake would scorch you; with blushes. It causes you to g0 to church dressed in your very best except your shoes and stockings, which you find you have left at home, It makes you marry a dark man with big black whiskers when you already have a perfectly satisfactory husband: who is blond and smooth faced. There is nothing that it will not do uncon- trolled by reason. Therefore I never have had much faith in the prophetic quality of dreams, although there are persons who pin their faith to those so-called warnings. We have heard them say. “I dreamed last night that I had Tost a tooth. That means bad pews,” or “I dreamed of walking among ruined buildings. That means that somebody in the family is going to be 111,” and, like fortune telling, the predictions that do not “make good” are forgotten. A recurrent dream {s of no fmpor- tance. I have known the same stage setting with its incidents to be pre- sented over and over in sleeping vis- fons without ever reaching its coun- terpart in.reality. - An uncomfortable position during sleep, or the fact that you are not feeling well often occa- slons troubled dreams. NEW THEORY IN ASTRONOMY Possibility That There Is a Tall At. tached to Our Earth Leads to Ingenious Suggestions. Opposite to the sun there is a very mysterious glowing patch, “which is thought to be attached to the earth as a cometlike tail. The. highest reglons of our atmos- phere cansist of very light gases, and the impression is that some of these were driven away by the sun or by other means, and that they stream off from the earth into space just as the light gases do from the head of a large comet, Naturally, this theory has aroused much controversy, and has led to all sorts of ingenious suggestions, One of these is that a swarm of meteors (of the kind we know. as.shooting stars) keeps us company through space at a distance of about a million miles, or four times the distance of the moon. But a tailed earth is an ideal vehicle for imaginative flights. It might be argued that if our globe has a tail why should not the planets Mercury and Venus, and even Mars, have one, Well, perhaps they have, for all we know to the contrary. Our earth’s tail would be much more easlly seen by us because of its near- ness and brightness. Miles of Film, Usaaally 150,000 to 200,000 feet ure run through the camera to get a six- reel, or 6,000-foot picture, - The direct- or statlons three, four ‘or five cameras to tgke the same scene. He has one camera close beside the struggling vil- lain and hero, another grinding from an elevation, still - another at this angle, one more at that angle. When | all of these negatives are developed, part of each enter into the composi- tion o the completed reel. Cure for Flat Feet. Are you flat-footed? If you don’t knoy, the next time you take a bath, observe the impressions that your wet feet make. If your feet are normal, there will be a narrow line from heel | to toe on the outside; if they are flat, | the entire bottom of the foot will show. How can you cure flat-footedness? Buy a handful of marbles, place them in two rows, and start pleking them {up with your toes. To do this you must curl up your toes; as a result the muscles of the feet will be exer- cised and thereby strengthened.—Pop- ular Science Monthly. 1§8] Bachelors and Children, According to one eminent literary authority. the best descriptions of chil- dren and of child life have been writ- ten by bachelors. i Nor So Long. Truth ‘Is stranger than fiction, Largely because you do not meet it as often,.—Johnstown Democrat. WHEN JERR GREEN GOY THROLGH PLANING TH' "WRSHINGTON'POST MAREH'AT: T\ LAST BAND GONCERT, WE WUZ SUR- PRISED <O FIND “(HAY TH' BAND HAD GEEW " PLANING: "TH' "NATIONAL BEMBLEM" SANS ‘THEY ALL. SOUND ALIKE ON TH' “OOM-PA" HORNY Delicious. . 7 Peppermint Flavor Wm. WRIGLEY, Jr...Co. Wrigley Bld4.. Chicaso, Ml : Please send mie a Fres Sample Packase of WRIGLEY'S P-Ke. NGl JOE FAMERTY WASISETTIN' ON TH' SQUARE SATURDAY NIGHT AY}ELEVEN, O'CLOGK wamt VDARNED |E | KNOW WHICH ONE OF “HEM | ELIWERS: 1S MINE “IGEZ HE, "SO M GOING, \ BUT JEFFll (0 GTICK.AROUND AND TAKE “THE NE | THAY'S LERY FREE SAMPLE | If vour dealer does not: WRIGLEV'S P-Ks | What are you loqking for 7 When you doctor for your health do you want the kind of results that mean Permanent Benefit? YOUR ACHES : ? AND PAINS— % Have a definite cause. That cause must-be removed. or the AFFECTIONS OP any of the following parts may be caused by. nerves mpinged a4 the spine by vertebess trouble will oceur again. No matter if you do get temporary relief from the miseries it inflicts. THE MAIN THING— —is to set your body in the order of nature’s plan. Harmonious action of its various parts depends upon “Keeping the Way” of travel for vital force open to its unrestricted passage from the brain. YOUR NERVES— —play to the most important role in your health, Chiropractic adjustments in- sure absolute nerve freedom. You can get well if you work to that end. Investi- ; gate our work and you will approve it. Join the ranks of those who have recov- ' ered through Chiropractic adjustiments. A trial will convince the most skeptical. A WELCOME AWAITS YOUR PERSONAL INVESTIGATION _ P} Drs._- Dannenberg‘ and Two CHIROPRACTORS PHONE 401-W FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. »

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