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1By e THE BEMIDJ DAILY PIONEER u)lulum VERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUN THE -KEMIDJI PIONEER PUBL!!HING , President ¢ R, Editos 7.D. wmmn, c. h.wmflr.-nmmw L Misneso u, ” mmuc:«nrmlofllull. d.to nnnnymoqn contributions. - Writey's nxme must No ,hown to the ofli.t‘ar. but not neqessarily for publication. Communica- for the Weekly. Pioneer must reach this oflmml Inter thn Tfllldl,i o .ull m\ to inmo publication | in the BUBSCRIPTION :&yj;*“ ¥ ..__Jl.oo i l.“ THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve psgas, pnblhhcd overy '.l'huldlp wad sent postage puid to any address for, in advance, $2.00. . OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCBED:NG! fl——_—-—__———_-——z’——: DISREGARD OF LAW There have always been.law breakers,-and undoubtedly j there always will be as long as the world lasts. Were it not for ' the human’ relationships between men and the, dependence of one-man upon-another, there would not need to be law. Moses, < the-great law-giver-of the Israelites, realized not only ‘the need g of law,but: recogmzed the necessity of enforeing the law. His |+ great enemies were not from without—buft from within. When beyed the laws they weit" ot ward, when they dis- . they went back or remamed where hey were, nations have invariably fallen from their hlgh posi- uise of their lawlessnessilust, avarieerand sin from; of the attacks from without. | * The fate ot other nations:will not be spared from America| if our nation £a1s87ito open disregard for'law and right ]1vmg‘ Evidence is strong on all sides that there'is much looseness in' * our individual and national life. Laws seem to be more in ev: i dence because of the breaking of them rather than in their rec- ‘ognition. g g We make laws to protect life and property, and we spend ! more time and money trying to get the breaker of such laws| = free from the penaity imposed than we do for the enforcement [ of the law. . In our own city, we turn over the enforcement of the laws| to three or four offxcels—we, as citizens, recognize no oblxga-! tion on our part to help in the observance of the law—it’s up to the police. * We daily see flagrant infractions of laws against speeding, gamblmg, sale of liquor, use of tobacco and cigarettes| by minors, swearing, spitting .on sidewalks, eurfew ordinance - and numerous other laws, but we pass by with no thought that we have any responsibility in the matter. Our children know that laws are daily violated and we, as fathers, take no action and pay no attention.” Is‘it any wonder|* that they grow up with ideas that violation.of law is no particu- lar crime? And we shake our wise old heads at' the disregard | of the young generation for law. Begin as fathers and mothers in the home, then as cmzens e community, in the observance of laws ourselves, and in|: “mdryivenile dlsx - doing our part in seeing they are observed; Itis squarély up to us. gard for law will greatly be reduced % CO-OPERATE WlTH THE EDUCAT! gg§_n | /4 With the first session of the Northern Division o e Mm— nesota Education association being called to order at the new ¢ .armory this evening at 8 o’clock, Bemidji citizens, who are in- terested in any way in the educatwn of the boys and gwls of:to- ‘day and tomorrow, shauld turn.out to welcome these éducators to the city and make their stay here pleasant in every way. i The success of the Northern Division convention.will.de- yend largely upon the support shown locally. Bemidji has al-| ways welcomed conventions of any sort, and now this city has a| | corivention whmh rates just as much sup'}fiort as any ever held !~ Able speakers have been secured to address each session f the three-day program. These gpeakers have messages of mportance to the teachers especiglly, but these same messages| are just as important to every citizen who desires to promote | educatmn along the proper lines. | A nominal charge is being made for the main sessions of the convention, while the sectional meetings tomorrow are free to| all. Bemldjfl must show its welcomé by attending these meet- ings dnd taking an active interest i, the welhm of the teachers, w}ule they are inithe city. S PPORT LOCAL ATHLETICS ung that an athletic team likes better than| i its own home ‘toWn. Victory comes next, al- though winning, is always an iniportant factor with any athletic organization: ‘Support of the:pr, -kipdoften tends to bring ctory. A chance to sup dr the local High school football 5 being offered the public Saturday afternoon, when the ¢ squad meets Parks Rapids at.the fair.grounds. Purchase of ‘Season bickets is not all that the boys want. They want you and | 3} z:)ur :gamlly tofllze Tesentbat thf game. Many a game has been on because the home boys knew that; the crowd wa i . them.i Be with'them Saturday! " e B &F substItute, but o the [ong test '(s superlority is ‘demonstrated. “Some of the gas companies are now selling mantles with a guarantee of at least 90 days’ service.” THE: LIFE ’or. GAS MANTLES . luminating Dcvlce Should Last 1,000 Burning Hours—May Be Destroyed In Few Moments, ne lollowlng facts -about gas man- |- tleg''are " taken from Gas Logic, the ho\l!o.orgnn of the biggest gas compuny Yorki ¢ i “Worriation.” + A colored man went to a Morrls plan and, atter 1looking through all of his pockets, found the correct’amount; As he tendersd:, i ho is a worriation, a o which he quickly added, Land ‘wwomen s¢ith dtlons what there is e;should Tast trom urnlng hours, | gfls oa -and;'on and .the slight ex- Dloslon that sometfmes occurs when 1t 1s° fed is highly destructive of |« .,;fitmi A “maritle~which, - Burning “«l&aflfly‘ might last for several thou- | s may, be Qe;:xoyed xn a few. by rough handlingfor I’ a few 1 but unu\oldnblg yedr The use of parsley, is almowt 1'in France for flavoring ‘ihdgaa ing dishes, and recently whin 4 sudden scarcity of the green wa§ no-{ tleed it was. discovered that it"was being bought up in Tar, ities by some persons who w stitute for absitithe. - e power s that meas- 2 le mantle is first lighted: extreniely high in cheap and in- )r- mantles; But 'soon, often with- tew: minutes, ‘the brilliancy of the elEmies. never to be regained. The’ STty of s initial Tight is a snare which the unwary and unwise fre- |/ tly fall in purchnsmg cheap man- put to 75 e N inec male power is the meas- light given out by a mantle long period, and s, of course, the test of a good mantle. The high- " New Model Needed. & {The real objection to a butter-knife Is that it isn’t sharp engugh in winter lyl-l i} hxmk to apake a payment on a Jloan . tor Thik" D " Supplied by l‘“” Aror xjx‘l'nn ‘News Service.) 0 vlhnneapellu En(ru_sh Entlm Munlcl- X pal Control to Veterans, With George Lea h as Mayor. With the qe:vlce men of the United smtes unwminz}y beginning to be- leve that the peo- ple thereof have entirely forgotten them, the city of | Minneapolis is a | flourishing oasis | in the alleged des- | ert of dried-up memory. The eiti- | zens - have er- trusted their. com- plete city gmern— ment to the.young World. war . vet- emrls and are iiking the experiment. | Heading the municipal machinery s Nlayor George B, Leach, who never;| bad taken parf in politics untll & er: he ’had com: anded the One Hi | ang Fifty-first Pleld artillery i Fortiy-secona divistor,” His city attor ney is Neil M Cranln, who had & pany’ of infantry in'the One Hindk and Fiftleth regiment, Bightletn divls | sion.” ‘A, O. Jensen, his chief of’po- lice, commnnded a battalion in a depot brigade. The mayor's secre- tary is' Frank R. Cullen, who led a platoon 'of engineers, Mayor, Leach was elected ‘after. 8 | | bitter contest, a fight in which his sup- | porters ‘declared disloyalists and Iuke- warm Americans ‘lined up solidly agalnst him. His platform was straight ‘Americanism -and straight business. tice, Mr.'Leach made a suécessful at- tempt td get every man of them a Job, | ‘Anderican Legion in 'posts in Mlmxe~ epdlis’and vicinity. Marine~ Corps -Feliow Travels -Fron San . Frafcigco " to. New. Ycr‘k L 0 1 Afler mLIng death trnm thirst on the great American desert, being mis- tiken for & bandit” ., and lodked " upon with susplcion the - communities where the marine uniform never had been seen, Charles .. Gilbert, United stmes marine corps, arrived in.) New -\ York' ve: cently, hale, hearty and ti) Ordered tr: ferred from his station at San Kran- vate Gifbert sought permission to hike the distance. He was given a fur- lough and sent upon his way. He car- ried a 61-pound pack during the en- tire trip. Between marches the marine found shelter and food from American Le- ghm uosgg alorigs thie: wr&y, ‘nd:when he: ched 1is h St - T was éo\'eled. month. e made the 2,200-mile; walk from San rancisco to: St. Paul'in 12 days actual time. Automobilists along the, way mnterlnlly helped tlu mnrcher POLICE POST OF THE LEGION est,” Commands an Organization of 1,200 Members. Twelve hundred members of the “finest police force in the world” who saw service in the World war, have banded them- selves together in the General La- fayette Police post, ot the Amer- commund !zntibn, and fancy pa(rnlmen,'dolectlves, desk sergeants and police officers, when' i(nj the i'oundup ‘of Germnny Ten' per bv:r cent'‘'of t1ém woh' promotion, béth in the ranks and among the shoulder. straps. Niueteen = bluecoats ' were awarded the Croix de Guerre for gal- The police post’ The. soldier-policerien - have | their own summer - resort, maintained by, the post, at Broad Channel, Long Is- land, where they may spend their an- nual vacations. They will form an. auxiliary to their post this fall, and isn’t enough like a spoon in tle may not have an initial mantle ¥ ~TUtica Morning Telegram, * nawar anial 1o that of A chaan. Subseriba for ‘the xmli)‘ Bringing home his artillerymen of | the Rainbow division after the armis- | He and his staff are members of the | 'MAKES HIKE OF 4,000 MILES| clsco to a new post at New York, Pri- | Peter Masterson of New York's “Fin. | America sent out. her genernl nlurm' lantry in action, and the same number; | | were killed iu battle, buried the 19 dead with m!lltnw nnd | potice honors: | as'| e = : THERE IS NOTHING QUAINTER Keep Visitors ‘to Gray Sea-Town Puzzled as to Where Streets Will Lead. ,?f 6u|h§e” b AuigLs he Yocks dnd hugalig such. wa clamped down to" its fine harbor, -and finer,-the. narrow. footways broad. ened a tri he devious. turns and nb&&‘fi#flnfi downs with Avhich -they. began—se.- abrupt. « that even today mpuy;a.Marblehead lane | has té. resort ta, steps to;get itself-and its. traveler avhere: iti would go.s; . There' is “nothing/: quainter! to. be | found in our country than: this'gray sea-town with its Incredibly tangled streets. Never does a strunger know where he will end when he sets forth to follow one of them. Sister and I found ourselves walking briskly away oftener. than .not. (& chance to take new bearings, and |In time we got s that.ve could lay | a course by the tower of Abbott hall, ;\\]uch dominates the. entire village. We would climb up- to it to get a fresh start, and usmflly found that we were approaching it” from another direction than ‘the ode’ we imagined. Tt 'was' a sort of Alce in Wonderland progress, the thing being to go where you knew you shouldn’t ‘in \order “to - get ~where you wanted to | be.—"0Qld Seaport Toywns,” Hildegarde lHl\\vthorne 2 | 'Wlndowi Easily Brbken by Blasts.” “ ‘Bxplostons of yowdér or other si | | Tt materials ofter dre very, destru | five’ to winddiws, even if:they are at | great distance’ fidm 'the point of e: | plosion. When an explosion occurs air | waves are thrown off with great vio- ; lence. Sometimes these air waves are thrown back with® sueh violence thaf | buildings' in the immediate vicinity of | the explosion are destroyed. Theé force of the air waves acts in all directions at the same time and and, ‘while the hou$es in its path are | strong enough to 1 okt they canmot ‘witliStand ‘the high pres- sure of aira—Mnl\vuhkee Sentinel. BiELY 1ot i Duller:.crxtter S The lamb in; they stock market fle< quently, mistakes: bimself .for a. fos— NEATLY & QUICKLY " - You don’t need'to send your Fur Work away mow—have it Done Here at Home! BEMIDJI. FUR SHOP - MATHERS & OLSON —Phoné232— At Brosv:k Tailor Shop Marblehead ' for spmany. xenrm“-‘xm he:hups: g g from the place we wanted to go to | Euckily the water | |exists, for when you strike it yon have | | whitchhazel, etc., as mixed. in Lavop-. with equal force. Ven} often these air | waves are thrown for great distances | e cl Paper clips 4l together and in“order clippings, loose’ leaves of mnguzlnes, Dhooks andymusic, enyelopes, cards | ¥ mples. patches yribbon, K“P‘k\ elag tic. AW llul,\‘cnltlng out 0f VAStng an | mlicle,v use-clips. along - tlie. o in | Explalnln‘ e Wflrd, “Bogus.” Bo«us is fhought to be a corruption h Atin ‘bagasen; iAmericas 1 the réfdse, of the sugar:cae. ‘Amother, derivation'is from ‘Borghese, aif Itathn who ‘flooded the southwestern states with counterfeit mon S so the name of a drink made rum and’ molasses. from . Strange Playmates.. Mwo odd playmates were noticed. by a~farmer in New Brunswick. . The farmer had a cat that had made: friends with a ground squirrel. They played around’the fields and ran.up { and down the woodbine on- the house.! | They were playmates until the' cat got killed, and then the squirrel dis- appeared. Most erls Can - ] ‘Have Pretty Eyes: No mtlrur woman is pretty if her ¢yes are red, strained or have dark' rings. Snmple camphor; hydrastls,. ‘llidey aih, will | htfihten the eyes cek’s. nse, will, surprise yopl ith TQUICK rosn Tts. o ‘sparklmg and vivacious. | change will please you. Dainty alu- minnm eye ‘eup FREE. E. A. Bar- ker, druggist.—Advertisement. Is the time of the year when || you want: your furniture re- | paired.- We: call for it,.fix < .-t, and return it. SAWS FILED | GENERAL REPAIRING *' Jake's Repair Shop . I| " Tenth & Irvine: Phone 897 Am'xouNcEMEN-r-’ H o have moved from our on Tlm-d S! [T | T [ F ISK AND MILL FREE AIR : ' VULCANIZING ACRGSS FROM CITY HALL |I l\HI\UI!I\IIIHI!MI!IIIII I before the impending Tloneor. —_which will assure you of your wintet’s supply’ effective—Oct. 30, 1921, Bemld Lumber & Fuel Co. Oppome Great Northern Depot BEMIDJI, MINN. railroad <tr1ké becomes Telephone 100 ps. i +useful for keeping s P FR‘H RSDAY EVENINGJ OCTOBE TURTLE RIVER son visited N. A. v (Too late for last week) Frank Rohrer. and wife, G. I. Good- mundson and our county agent left {Monday by auto for the Twin Cities to_attend the National Dairy Show. “Martin Otterstad spent Monday in Brainerd - on" business:' He' returned Tuesday evening. made a short trip ‘to, and of ,which. Mr. O owner.: . 3 The'\ potatoes NOW ON SALE Second Hand Rose \ edley ] Ted Leuns and His Band, Wang ‘Wang Blues. Fox-Trot. Ted Lewis and His.Baud Home Again Blues: Fex-Trot Ted Lewis and His Band, Molly O, Fox-Trot . Art Hickman’s Orchestra Good-bye, Pretty Butterflies Art Hickman’s Orchestra I'Ain’t Nobody’s Darl ling Song Fox-Trot . Frankie and J ohnny. i Biese Trio and Crumit Remember. Waltz Prince’s Dance Orchesira dley Waltz Prince’s Dance Orchestra ing | Soldier’s Joy—Massa’8 in the Cold; Cold Ground ! " Turkey in the Straw (Medley ot Jigs and Recls) 1 Little Yaller Gal—Old Black Joe .Tock Tamsr/n s Homplpe (Medley of Jigs and Reels) on’ Richardson. Oriental Orchestra Oriental Orchestra Danse Arabe * Danse-Orientale: ' } My Sunny 1enn Brnadway Quartet Tuck Me to Sleep in My 0ld Kentucky Home ~* Dale and Reardon T'm Looking for a BIiebird' (to Chase My Blues Away) ' Marion Harris . Sweet. Cookxe Marion Harris " In the Old Town Hall Van & Schenck | What's-a Gopna Be Next . .Van & Schenck Who’lLBe the Next One (to Cry Over You) . . Charles Hafnsan If You Only Knew Edwin Dale Sleepy Head " “Dale and Reardon Fare Thee Well, Love, Fare Thee Well 7/ Columbia Stellar Quartet ! fa p ' | I Ain’t Givin’ Nothm Away Sweet Mamma (Papa’s Getting Mad) Southern Quaylelf Opera and Concert Because - i Charles Hackc{t La Forzn zlel Destmo (Pace, Pace Mio Dig),, Samson and Dehlah—Love, Lend Me Thy Might, | Jeanng Gordon Gentle Annie Ol’ Car’lina Those Songs My Mother Used to Sing Carmela P:mselle Thinking of You Carmela Ponselle } JET it } 1 Instrumv't} 1 ‘entél Musi¢ Pnraphraae on Tschmkovsky’s Flower Waltz': . Percy Graing! Wedding Day at Troldhaugen Percy Grainger. Solveig’s Song- Eddy. Brown Serenade Espagnole } 35 Pri; X Fimd B:mf,} St Eddy Brown i 1ls. . Key, of “F’ Sharp Major Ylonastery Bel K y Cincinnati Symphony Orchestre Intermezzo Sinfonico—from Cavalleria Rusticana Gino Marinuzzi and His %nlm«y Ol 0 h B 5 et Do 014 Flag:Goes By cords : fumbia Dealers, the 1084 and “A0th._of -Ecery. Month ‘The. HA PHONE 15 “Otto' Shook, wife, soi Ottes and together with N. thi t Complete November Lns’i A- 3458 85¢c | A-3459 85¢c E v7zss | 85¢ A-3465 | 85c A- 3457 -3461 85c¢ A- 3463 A-3460 85¢ | Southern Quartell A-3450.! 85¢ 79575 | $l GO Rosa Ponsene $1 50 $1.50 Qscar. Scaqk A-3448; Oscar Seagle-and Male Quartet §:31.00. ! A:3466 $1.00 I'$1. 50 A 3449 $1.060 At 6!03 c.eo "r ‘BAKER co. LLMARK Store T}I‘IRD STREET DALY PlflNEl']l WANT ADS BRING RI'SULTS