Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 15, 1921, Page 6

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s Twentieth ‘Century Limited |g Laugh ’With Us— Not At Us— Let Cold Weather Come Even if cold weather is not very, “far away, most of the girls are al- ‘ready well prepared and have been for some time. They’ve had their ears banked all summer. Now they’re putting away their furs. —Aint We Got Fun— News of the Village “There are a good many automo: mobiles around this town now, but we haven’t had time to court them yet.” 2,000-mil; Pioneer trips offered by The culation campaign which ends October 29 won’t be worth | much if the str matures. We'll bet tbat the winners will prefer the cash. —Can You Blame 'Em?— Here’s Aa Old One to wait. He then went into the front _ door of a hotel and out through the back door. The taxi driver waited for- over an hour, it is said, and then found out his mistake. You can see | Minnesota whites, sac shipments 2,156 cal Wisconsin and North Dakota, bulk, sota and North Dakota Ohios, bulk.! $1.25 to $1.50; Idaho Russets, sacked, $2.10 to 5 2.15. { WICKEDEST BUFFALO IS onimo, the wickedest old buffalo bull that éver lowered his shaggy head, is dead. Geronimo was owned by Charles Irwin, of the Y-6 ranch. But Geronimo’s meanness increas- Naturally, ranchmen cursed Geroni- Uiy | INDIANS TO APPEAL TO KING | Delegates From €ix Nations Represent rights represent one of the oldest and most famous confederacies In the world, certainly the most famous in the history of “savage” nations. | The Five Nations confederacy, the eastern* branch of the Iroquois, goes back before the discovery.by Colum- bus. It was strengthened in 1712 by roras. g The Treaty of Utrecht had declared the Five Nations to be British sub- Jjects, and in the long struggle between France and England in America the of the Five Nations, sometimes on the AS\EEP AT . < TUE SWITEH In Congested Centers They Have Been Sacrificed to Alleged Interests of Business. 1 (Prepared by the United States Department, of Agriculture.) One of the characters in an early- ing that New York never would be a real business city because Broadway and Maiden- Lane were lined with trees. The Van Vrooms, the Stu sants, the Artavelts, and other early in the fields. But one will see no e HERE | THOLGHYT Nouv SAID T NEW NORK PAPERS WUZ T MOST | ENTERPRADIN' IN (W' oW trees There are chap- sheuld be planted. ters also describing pruning, spraying, transplanting, and other subjects of D. C. HONEY IN BRIDAL CEREMONY Pretty Custom in Sparta That is a Survival of an Ancient Pagan Rite. an ancient pagan rite. When the bride has really become a wife, after her dow: as been paid, and after the priest solemnized In her hand is a glass of honey and T orders you to arrest yourself and walk How Come This Awful Boner? | MAMY THEY ANT A ORE Arimenia’s Heritage of Song. Armenia has a distinctly national collection of songs, some of which have come dewn from prehistorie tim Ordered to Arrest Himself. When an Akron (Ohio) man was arraigned in municipal court the other for intoxication, it was his hun- —Aren’t They Numbered?— One of Oldest Confederacies in fuiportance to every town or city day " " # b re - ce Wi ast two | Through melodies transmitted from In View of the Strike the World. g : s e - dredth appearance within the last two ] l e i it whether it has trees or wishes to have | vo)s on the same charge, according | Parents to children great national | ’ o egih el POTATO MARKET / — jeen. R o ’dugfilet?;n:t}l‘fk’em(l);m:;lcx,%‘:?l;oh;‘x:fii The delegates from the Six Nations ,““m' . thfi .:’;;})MT ":]“’ l}i }}"d tre‘; to police court records. “The city is | events and the heroes and sages of less negotiations on wages and work- | icago, Oct. 15.—Potato receipts | who are to make a personal appeal to :}:}‘;’:‘C:H’m; L’l;ire‘:l sinte: ?’;(enr‘vmf’t— wasting man encrgy and gasoline, to | centuries ave familiar to each gennrnt-- ing conditions are reopened, the two | i, S s . §. | King George in respect of their ancient S S il sy say nothing of the wear and tear on | tion, 1 ving in seng a vast amoun e conditions are reopene e 87 cars. Market steady. Total U TREES PLANTED IN STREETS |ment of Agriculture, Washington, | oo police patrol in hauling you in so | of historical facts that otherwise many times. In the future the court | wowld have heen lost. Old Lovers Exchange Tokens. The fashion for love tokens was at its height about the middié of the ‘Bighteenth century, when engraved tokens were exchanged between loves Some of these tokens were eng into police headquarters every time you are drunk,” said Judge L. S. Pardee. The man promised he would follow the court’s instructions. Making Shocs to Fit Corns. B L [ el EXECUTED BY OWNER | the admission of the Tuscaroras from s ,m‘:g sttitfizg:to}?;e&f Efi,’,"‘t‘i,"fl‘,‘?;}‘ | North Carolina, and consisted then of ' day American romance of the time In Sparta there is a®most striking No matier how large they may be, | With initials, othe had two hear River E‘%ile‘zftex- nrr‘i?linr st bis des- | Sy Dutted Tres) the Mohawks, Oneidas, Cayugas, Onon- | when thé “stamp act” was causing all | and "pretty custom, whose origin iS'| pew’ shoes hurt one’s corns, | joined and a date, and pany were in- itk 25 T =) 5 8! S Ca Vi Tusca- | kinds of is ' as lar- | lost in the mists of antiquity. Stu- 'The g stretel r 1a rs 1i seribed with mottoes. tination, he got out, told the_driver RGN __Ger. | dasas and Senecas, with the Tusca- | kinds of trouble is recorded as decl q The shoe-stretcher or last offers little ot e drive Cheyenne, Wyo., Oct. 15.—Ger N dents tell us that it is a survival of —_— or no relief, e it makes no im- pression on the shoe where it is most needed—over the corn. Dropping a little hot parafiin wax or sealing wax over the part of the last where the s Wanted Shew to Begin. T had taken myr nephew to church with me. His father had taken him ° to vaudeville shows many times, but that it took a lot of brains to think |ed with age. Wire fences meant noth- | British government based its claim to | settlers of the country saved fine trees | the marriage vows, the bridegroom [ corn grows on the foot will causé this| (is was bis first visit to chureh up some way to beat a taxi driver. |ing tb him, and the buffalo became | Inrge tracts of country sometimes on | about their homes,? on the village | takes her to his own home. At the | part of the shoe to streteh and form | while v xitin:' [‘m"tinv sermon to huuin‘ —Out of His Fare— !4 common sight on many ranches. | the ground of the so-called ‘subjection | greens, along the country roads, and i door stonds the bridegroom’s mother. | g depression. A valuable hint to those | piny \‘\‘l‘l\l;‘l"‘fl to e Tondly + who are troubled with corns.— Popular | «syntie, when's the curtain going up?” | > ihe btk The Jokor | mo’s existence, as their cattle escaped | ground of treaties made with them. By | trees nowadays on Broadway, and | water. The bride drinks some of it S0 | Science Monthly. Clilea . Thlhihe o other day a man came to |through the gaps in the fences.'Re-| the middle of the Eighteenth century | Maiden Lane has been transformed | that her words in that house may & 3 s X s court plaster to put on his face where | he had cut an ugly gash with a s: 1 ty razor. At first we thought that| the joke was on him, but secing that | he has not returned the quarter we ! and borrowed a quarter to buy some ports of badly gored cattle came to | Irwin, and morning a particularly fine bull was found disemboweled. A few hours later, Gerenimo appeared at his wallow, his head matted with blood. an orator of the Five Nations declared in conference: “We don’t know what | you Christians, Fnglish and French, | intend.” We are so hemmed in by you both that we have hardly a hunting from the pleasant, tree-bordered e gion of Duich homes with flower gar- dens into the busiest wholesale jewel- ry district in America, if not in the world. ways be as sweet as honey. The rest of the honey in the glass is spilled upon the lintel of the doorway l and is smeared there—that the house may be free from strife. e e e e NO DOUBT THERE HAS BEEN MORE OR LESS CON- | are not so sure now. And so, on circumstantial evidcncu,i place left. In a little while, if we find | Beauty and comfort gave way to the | Then one of the wedding guests | FUSION IN LOCATING THE CORRECT TIRE SALES ] —May Be On Us— the bt buffalo. was exccated by lr.| @ bear in a tree, there will immediate- | xroads of commerce, not only in New | breaks on the {hreshold a pome- | . d win. His head; with itslvwic'sz'ed]y1 Iy appear an owner of the land to claim | York but in most of America’s great | granate. In some of the Cyclades | AND TIRE REPAIR SHOP YOU WISH TO PATRONIZE. Probably Expected a Flood gleaming eyes hangs on the wall of We are so perplexed be- ! the property. ¢ities, so that today trees in a busi- islands the pomegranate is thrown at “Duiring a recent rainstorm | saw | [iving room of V-6 $ v ve hardly know wha f P s hrok g a ng r of the Y-6 ranch house.| tween you that we hardly know what | hasg street are a rare sight. There | the door, and so is broken, If some " y 3 ;o]fi;:""‘:’ ‘V}‘]Lh k“‘:z‘ I”!“é‘]h “'l‘ His hide makes a beautiful rug. to say or think.” aro elm-shaded villages in New Eng- [ 0f the seeds stick the omen is con- Please remember —Fisk and Miller Tires s ageai] ,,‘.'y ol ras on e ‘I‘]Al"d I‘NS ni t,”ml"ff"ls th: siar —_— land; maple-shaded towns in New | sidered wonderfully fine. In the i»]*'"m: | are sold only by the City Tire & Repair Co., th a oard above his grave, erected For io valic ¥ tho > e is nla . : £ cuec DX York and the Ohio valley, and there | of Rhodes the nemegranate Is nlaced formerly known as Matland’s Vuleanizing wet sidewalk,” writes a contributor to the Winnipeg Free Press —Holding Them Up— We Agree With the Scot We are of the same opinion as the Scotehman, who, when viewing the pyramids in Egypt, said with a sigh| that it appeared to him to be a lot! of mason work that wasn’t bringing | in any rent. —Have You a Little Scotch?— | NO KLAN FOR PENROSE (By United Press) | Washington, Oct. 15.—The Ku| Klux Klan is a_mystery to Scnator | Penrose. The Pennsylvania senator says he has never informed himself on the activities of the organization. “I have been a great joiner all my vhoys on the Y-6, “is to be found ong the phantom herds of Para- dise, where Geronimo, the bison in- carnation of the devil himself, has ceased his roaming and fence-walk- ing and treacherous charges, to find happiness in the society of his kind.” MESQUITE, TEXAS, RAISES PROFESSIONAL BALL PLAYERS N (By United Press) Dallas, Tex., Oct. 15.—Every thir- teenth person born in Mesquite, Tex., turns out to be a professional base- ball player. With a population of 350 this little | a few miles | town, which is Joc outh of Dallas, has sent 27 natiye ons to organized baseball and some of them have been big league play- ers, ated W00 BY HAIR TONIC NO.MORE Young Men With Small Wages Find Girls Do Not Demand Aroma— Barbers Complain. Hark to the plaint of the barbers, enjoins the Milwaukee Journal. Days when youths were wont to stroll in, seat themselves and murmur noncha- lantly, “Give me everything,” are now history. Modern Lochinvars have dis- covered that they ean step about with the lady of their choice without sur- rounding themselves with the aroma of hair tonic. L Barbers complain that since the business depression began and wages have come down, the Beau Brummel of wariime prosperity who used to spend $2.50 every few days in improv- ing his personal a 1 ters of population where they should are oak-tree streets to be seen in the southeastern states, but for the most part this refers only to small towns or clties—never to the congested cen- have been |preserved. Washington, the national ecapital, is one of the e: ceptions, and even there the plantings | were not always wisely arranged, | The treegrowth in the streets of | the average American town or city is ragged and unkempt in appearance, while that of the suburb or small vil- lage often is not much better, unle: the planting has been done under mu- | nicipal control, and the plantings on | a street have been confined to a sin- | gle kind of tree. The telegraph, the | telephone, thie electric light, and the | trolley car ve added their share to- | ward the mutilation or destruc the good trees that were in tence on ‘the “threshol néw home, and the bridgroom crushes it with his foot when he enters with her. Symbol of love and of fruitfulness is the pomegranate in the minds of those whose affections still- cling to the “Glory that was Greece” | With what tremulous fervor the little bride in Rhodes must hear her wedding guests shout as the' bride- groem traces a cross on the threshold’ with honey : “Be good and sweet as this honey!” HONCR FOR LARGE FAMILIES 1 £ RIS ER When a Seventh Son Is Born in- Argentina, the President Be. comes ‘His Godfather. The custom of naming a child in honor of a great man or a man con- Shop—Ilocated at 402 Minnesota Ave., just across Minnesota Ave. from the City Hall. If you have tires that need Vulcanizing, we are in' a position to turn out fitst-éla’ss guaranteed work at reasonable prices. “QUALITY AND SATIZFACTION” IS OUR MOTTO WHEN YOU THINX CF - Ti{RE SERVICE—LEARN TO'SAY: CITY TIRE & REPAIR CO. L. T. LaLone, Prop. ——ACROSS FROM THE CITY HALL—— life, but I never got. into the Ku > Klux Klan,” said Penrose. |~ They began to raise th¥ir boys to| be ball playe ack in the 80s, when | Babe Polly went up to the National| League as a catcher. Then they sent | ppearance is a thing | | at the time of their coming. | spicuous for some deed which catcles Faulty of pruning have 1 the fancy of the moment, is as old as caused dis “Suc- | time itself. Indeed, we have only to of the past. “In the d would order ys that are done the hoys h H methods all the frills known to the | FOOTBALL GAMES TODAY igurement ard ruin. ARE YOU (By Unlted Press) i;{llllct},fi‘::?slfix;,Ll:mfilfix‘l:l‘y Jfiii‘)ifi"fi;‘ tonsorial artist,” said one barber. | o golows the careful planting of | turn back the pages of history far _J St. Paul, Oct. 15.—All teams -of ¥ [ “Now they shave themselves and | oq trops which ave given adequate | enough to realize that hundreds of CONTENT “WITH Cincinnati, and other players to mi- | men the Minnesota State Football ference were in action today. The schedule included the follow- | ing games: At Northfield, Beloit col- lege against Carleton; at St. Peter, St. Thomas against Gustavus Ad8lph- us; at Decorah, Ia., St. Olaf against Luther college; at St. Paul, Macales- ter agaifist Hamline. con- NGRTH DAKOTA IS ACTIVE IN CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS United Press) Bigmarck, N. D., Oct. 14, — One| thousand, one hundred fifty miles of | road have been constructed in North | Dakota since 1917 at a total cost of $4,736,800, according to rep on file in the state engineer’s office. Up to June of this year, 311 miles have been built. Two hundred and seven-| ty-nine miles have already been ap-| proved for next year, Of this, Ramsey will have 35; Barnes, 20; Nelson, 12, (By CABINET IN DANGER premier, “It is permissible to inquire wheth- er the time has not come for us to envisage an accord with the United ' 'States and to know in what measure ‘and upon what we are authovized to | base our hopes other than the warm| _expression of friendship ‘manifested | on towards us by the n people. ! expect al engagements from Washington engagements which | e not in harmony with their con-| or policies. | much to gain by her political leader| ‘coming into personal contact with Harding and his cabinet. Then, too, it would have a deplorable effect pon our American friends if the| remier should renounce his visit to| ashington after formally aceepting) he invitation. | October inly it would be a grave er-"’ |FOR SALL nor leagues. Among the minor league stars were Ewell Gross, shortstop for San Antonio; Lawrence Parker, with Dal- las; Dan Gross, with Ranger; Cha lie Porter, known as “Chief” Port with Soringfield (Three-I Leagu Cy Watson, Texas League star twir er, and several others who are play- ing minor league ball, but who have not yet come out ar In addition to this the town has an amateur team which has chal- lenged any team in the state for a series of five games for a big purse. LAUNCH DRIVE FoRr Funlbs FOR RELIEF GF IRELAND (By United Press) Paul, Oct. 15. ion of the American Conimittec for Relief of Ireland today launched a drive for fuhds. The campaign will ‘continue until 22. 'In St. Paul, the local comfiittee will conduct a tag day, the last day of the drive. ¢ About + $50,000 of Minnesota’s quota to the general campaign fund has already been raised. The money is not to be used for political or war- fare purposes, but to alleviate the suffering of the innocent victims of of “the last five years of strife in Ircland. WILL OPEN BRIQUETTING PLANTS IN NORTH DAKOTA (By United Press) Minot, N.*D., Oct. 15.—~Carl Jacg- er, president of the Lignite Indus- al corporation of Minneapolis, is preparing. to open five briquetting plants in this state. Fifty thousand dollars’ worth of equinment which he purchased while in Europe, study- » briquetting, is en route here. The ot plant is expected to be in op- ation; by, the first of the vear, By- products o 1 will be ‘ufilized. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS M er. 65 pairs roller skates, 415 Tilth st 2t10-17 about once in weeks get a plain | haircut.” | Another barber admitted that he I | forced to use a high type of manship to convin customer the he needs @ mass; The porte counting his nicklex when the da husines over, laments when he v ealls the tin when “tw the usual tip. The manicu men aren't susceptibie to being vampeds i To Give Timber “a Shot.” The best moethod of applying pre- servatives to timber is by the pressu which is used by practically e commercinl companies, s American Fovestry Magazine of hinglon., By ‘this means the ofl fhe tis: thorou; otherwis 1es of the wood, thus giving a s and permanence not There dre va- all use large and which avy pressure may be applied in trenting eylinders, which are usually six feet or more in dinmeter and a hundred feei or more in lengti. expens and he Leprosy in Indians Rare. T AL Da Matta weites o Bra Medico (Rio de Janeiro) vears of practice in g ine dia rosy. i prehistoric pe fory an Peru there is no resentation of any derormity suggest- ing leprosy, althou representations of other deformities none of the early leprosy among the 1 with le a cxplorers mention tives. Woman Rules Empire, The actual ruler of the plre, which compri the new of Mosul, is Ly ma. - She Teading member of the Neste aveh family, i tured woman, and country, undet a British protectorate, the Mar Siwoon, or mineral salt is forced deeply into | | | s | he has seen but two of the In- common and | an patri- | ably the m a brilliant, highly cul-|ing for prop governing her | through Auring the minority of her nephiew, the | employs an ex young, (Lombardy ! Narrow Upright Trees Poplars) on a Narrow Street in Wa/ahinnton, DsC. protection and timely attention,” says Tarmers’ Bulletin 1209, Planting and Care of Street Trees, just issued by the United States Department of Ag- viculture, “IEver tree should be trdined to its proper form while | so that sevére pruning will not be necessary later. Guards are neces- too, for several year “To the mutilation of severe prun- ing has been added the destruction of many trees in centers of business be- | cause they excluded a litde light, or made the store less prominent, or were somewhat in the way of using the sidewalk for merchandise.” The bulletin insists that providing shade on ety streets is as much a municipal function as providing lights or sidewalks and should, therefore, be cared for by public_.offici Prob- | | au uppaid comm sor five members which in turn | tive officer. Meth- | three ods of organ! | seventh son is born to any one of the ! aceording to_custom, takes upon_him years before the birth of Christ and women named their children for [ important personages, perhaps hop- | ing—just as parents do now—that the important man would send a gift to his namesake or “look out for him” when he grew to man’s estate. But it ivas reserved for the re- publie of Argentina to hit upon a way of giving distinction to the large families of that nation. When a families in that nation’s close upon one million twelvé hundred thousand square miles, the president of Argen- tina takes special notice of the event. No matter how humble or how poor may be . the parvents of the seventh son, the president of the, republic, Power Tects Character, Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. It is easy for the weak to be gentle. Most people can bear adversity. But if you wish to know what' a man/really is, give him power. This is the supreme test. It is the glory of Lincoln that, having almost absolute power, he mnever abused it, except on'the side of mercy. He spoke not to inflame, not to up- braid, but to convince. He was the embodiment of the self-denial, the courage, (he hope, the nobility of the. || nation~—Robert Green Ing sell the duties “of. godfather o the bo; There are, of course, certain privile; which ave granted the boy because his godfather the president of the republic. Not the least of these is the privilege of calling upon his godfather—in the arms of his proud mother or father—and cooing at him. Lake Baikal. Lake Baikal, iu Siberia, is one of J the great inland fresh-water seas, be- ing nearly as long as Lake Superior, but not so wide. It is flanked 1 great mountains, id Its shores ave filled with wood cutters and fishermen, but there ave very few hunters, al- though many fur-bearing animals are found in the great forests about it. SOMETHING _ NEARLY |AS GOOD ? VISIT OUR PLANT SATURDAY EVENING BETWEEN 7:00 AND 9:00 AND LEARN THE REASON - " WHY KO ORS . Pastuerized Milk & Cream' ENDS THE QUEST FOR THE BEST We Guarantee It to-Be the Cleancst and Safest Milk in the City

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