Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 26, 1921, Page 4

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i { | SRR e - { { e e | . bring peace and prosperity. If the allied governments had real- ized the utter impossibility of the mass of ignorant, politica]lyf}:‘j“fifi ';E;”Z;fi;flfl_“"‘“ although| Frost, next Saturdy evening. Every- | George Sthol and wife visited with Sidney Millar’s over Sunday return- ' THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. @ B. CARSON, President HARNWELL, K. ¢ w. Editor J. D. WINTER, City Editor | Telophone 922 | Emtoped postoftice at Bemidji, Minnesots, as second-slase maties | ‘?*mmhcm;umt.;m. No attention. paid to anonymous contributions, Writer's name must kmown to the editor, but not necessarily for publioation. Communica i o for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday ;02 each week to insure publication in the current issue. | _ THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, published every Thurwday Bbd sent postage paid to any address for, in advance, $2.00. OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS i _— 300,000 VISIT MINNESOTA LAKES THIS YEAR Minnesota has taken a definite place among the “play-% ground” states of the country. - With the tourist season pra_ctx-; cally over, it is estimated that nearly 300,000 touristy visited | the state during the 1921 season. | ‘A questionnaire sent out to Minnesota summer ‘resort_s by the Ten Thousand Lakes of Minnesota association indicates that| fully that many visitors were here during the summer. Fifty-| seven returns from a total number of 250 summer resorts, report| 93,686 tourists, of which number 42,426 came from out of state. The grand total will run as high as 300,000, according to state- ments made by officials of the Ten Thousand Lakes of Minneso- ta association, for many of the largest resorts have not yet re- orted. | 4 Carlos Avery, state game and fish commissioner, estimatesl that 24,000 non-resident fishing licenses were sold up to Sep-! tember 21. One of the large steamship companies uperatmgf between Chicago and Duluth reports that it landed an average| of 400 persons a week in Duluth during the months of July .and ‘August. . gMore than 6,000 out-of-state tourists registered at the of-| fices of the Ten Thousand Lakes of Minnesota association in the! Twin Cities, representing every state in the Union and a few| foreign countries. | ‘According to Ivan A, Coppe, executive secretary of the z_\s-! sociation, the increase in the number of visitors this year, despite| the general business depression, is due to Minnesota’s geogra'phl-l cal location, which makes it easily reached from that part of the country which has always contributed the largest share of sum-|phants is on sale this week at Uncle | stand in Washington Market for just| Sam’s auction at the United States mer vacationists, namely Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska and Oklahoma. Sixty per cent of the summer resorts throughout the state| report that they had to turn away a great many visitors on ac-| count of lack of accommodations and a great many of them con-, template -new building for next season. | ; 8 | o—— s THE END OF A' DREAM From Moscow, in the last week in September, came word of | surrender to economic forces. ! The news did not come from the so-called capitalistic press, but from Kameneff, head of the. Moscow Soviet and member of the Bolshevik cabinet. He announced-that-all-industries except railways, metal, textile and fuel sources were to be returned to private capital. Private banking will be restored and a Nation- | PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY | H. DENU, Sec. and Mg» | ] 2 THE BEMIDJjI GAILY PIONEER en route to New York city. Gains- borough’s masterpiece, “The Blue Boy,” has been sold by the Du.ke of Westminater to an art connoisseur and dealer of this city and ‘London, and he already is on the high seas with it safely tucked under hi; arm. One of the true art products of this year, however, according to 7,000 discriminating and enthusiastic wom- en and girls of various ages, is the Vassar College poster drawn and con- tributed to the endowment fund cam- | paign by none other than Charles Dana Gibson himself. The apprecia- tive 7,000 are naturally the alumnae and undergraduates of the college, and at least 1,000 of them have an idea of where Mr. Gibson found the ideal college girl he has depicted. “It is hard to tell which we are proud- er of,” explained one of the younger campaign workers, ‘‘having Charles Dana Gibson do that for us or having Secretary of State Hughes on our committee.” The campaign which opened the day is for $3,000,000. from which the entire income will be used in increasing future salaries. This may explain some of the high prices we\grumble about: A bride-to- be stopped in at a sale in one of the musny lingerie shops on Broadway the other day to purchase some lace and ribbon. The salesgirl, a child. of Italy, began persuasively to show the re- duced articles, and picking up one, she said: “We once said $7 for this and sell a lot of them; then we say $3.95, not so many; now we say $1.95, none at all; soon we go back to $7. Everything from marbles to ele- appraisers’ stores, Christopher and Washington streets. It is the largest auction of unclaimed merchandise in history. The most valuabie. and one would think, most remarkable, list is 200 Class A 300 horse-power airplane New Yor Le}yLer Lucy Jeanne Price New York, Oct. 26.—One more of engines. You know even one airplane | the famous paintings of the world is! engine doesn’t seem like the sort of thing one would forget after having| ordered. | The prize for energy among Col- umbia University students this year undoubtedly goes to Miss Theresa Thromp, who walked from her home in Ferndale, Wash., to the very camp- us of the university, with a Colt 38| and with a high-power rifle slung over her shoulder. She left Washington last spring and arrived in plenty of | time for the opening of the fall term| at Columbia. " Mrs.Jacob M. Ehrlich lives at a ho-| tel in a busy district of Manhattan, but she knows there are creatures which like quiet and country life. Consequently she established a farm fifteen years' ago where tired out| horses and cats and dogs could go and | spend the latter part of their lives resting by babbling brooks. The farm is, in fact, a sanatarium for animals, with a life-time home thrown in, in| the event the patients show signs of | liking it after they get all rested up. Here is another argument for the makers of simple, inexpensive look- ing cigarettes. Henry Britt was get- | ting along fine the other day collect- ing money from Third avenue ele-| vated passengers by throwing a mod- | est card in their laps stating “I am a cripple.” In fact, he had collected | $10 in that one train. Then he ruined it all by reaching into his pocket and | pulling out a package of especially | high-priced cigarettes. A detective saw him and he was undone. We are not entirely a city of idlers | nor of restless people who change from one job to another. Mrs. Cath- | crine Millerman has conducted her | si'xt,v years. She celebrated her; eighty-fourth birthday last week, and works at her stand from 6 o’clock| every week morning to 6 in the eve- ning. And she says she hasn’t begun yet to notice one bit of monotony in her life. T — Monday. [EEE S S ENER LRSS * PINEWO0OD * ISR FERRESE SRR 2 ] T. B. Millar is now learning to run his Ford car which he purchased last »Carl Clauson and, Carl Schmitt urday evening. The supper was under the direction of Mrs. Rector, Those present report a very pleasant eve- ning. Arthuy Rogholt came home from Inear Fergus Falls where he spent the {past three thionths with' friends, also {and Alfred Allandslee also spent the | SUBSCRIBE FOR THE assisting. ligtvesting and threshing. | It is repb¥ted that Oscar Rogholt |got quite Badly bruised by a board autoed to Pelicen Rapids Saturday returning to Pinewood Sunday. Mr. Clauson brought back a brand new al Bank of Russia, with a charter idqntical with that of) the|Ford car. Bank of France, is to be established. The surrender as far as we can judge is complete. Com- munism has failed, just as all well informed economists and so- ciologists knew that it would. Its failure has been postponed the T. B. Millar family visited in Shevlin Sunday. The Misses brother, Clarence many months by the colossal blunder of the allies in supporting | North Dakota Ftiday. attempts of reactionary forces to invade Russia and destrpy the Communist government by force of arms. As long as it was fighting for its life, the government could excuse its failure to| untrained people, evolving a syster of government that could replace by revolution the present political and economic system of the rest of the world and kept hands off, the end now rqached would have come two years ago. Thousands of lives, millions of dollars, could have been saved and Europe would be further along the path of social and financial reconstruction. The sha- dow of Bolshevism over Europe no longer exists.—Farm Stock and Home. - ~ . ) o MOVE FOR SPEEDIER TRIALS According to Attorney General Daugherty, there are 142,- 000 cases, both civil and criminal, now awaiting trial in the fed- eral courts. Criminal cases make up approximately 50,000 of these, and civil cases to be tried number 92,400." In order to get| justice served out he has asked congress to appoint eighteen ad- ditional judges. ) If law is restrained from taking its course, it will loose its effect. Justice, to be effective, should be swift.. The delay in administration of law tends very strongly to diminishi the re- S£ect forit. If more judges are needed to try these cases, there should be more judges appointed, but, in our opinion, it might be well to investigate some of the technicalities and court prac- tices which prolong trials unnecessarily and retard disposition of cases. Many times it appears, at least to the casual onlooker or reader,’as if deliberate means are taken by courts to unnec-| essarily prolong cases which might be disposed of much faster. 0 N BIRTH CONTROL TO BE REVIVED? ) We are informed that one of the noted birth control adve- cates of England has arrived in America and was enthusiastical-| ly received. We were not informed who the blue bloods were| who gave her so enthusiastic a reception, but it, no doubt, was a bunch of .women who never had 'any: children to control, per- haps a couple of poodle dogs or a pet monlkey. Birth.contro, if it has been given any consideration in the land of its birth, England, has not solved many of the difficul-| ties there, ~Actual statistics taken, where birth control has ever| AN - :'.acial deterioration and also in appalling decreases in popula-| « tion. | O By B 3 A POOR TRADE . Needing more money, Russia is again permitting the manu- facture of vodka and alcoholic heverages, as a government| monopoly, to be used mostly for export purposes. Sovietism,| already tipsy on its legs, has apparently chosen this means for| been attempted, have shown conclusively that it has resulted in!;" A |at the M. O. Rogholt home. convention in Bemidji last week. ing to Bemidji Monday. Sunday school will be held at the church every Sunday at 10 o'clock. Services will follow at 11, October 30. Everybody welcome. Mrs. Clara Siebel and Mrs. Worth of Bemidji were visiting relatives at Debs a few days this week. AR AR R R R RS R R R R I’Cliilfllk?..iil’ Mrs, Albin Carlson, Mrs. Ed Lar- son and Mrs. M. O. Rogholt spent last Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Ed- win Rogholt. Alex Sawyer returned Monday to help complete a barn he has been helping build south of Cass Lake. Fred Murphy and T. H. Phillips returned fro mtheir trip to North Dakota last Thursday. They spent a couple of days in Mahnomen, en route, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cordie Helferich. Mrs. Henry Sawyer and son, James, called on Mrs. Joe Johnson last Wed- nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Anderson are planning on moving to Minneapolis in the near future. Mr. Anderson expects to take a course in a trade school. Mrs. Ed Rogholt spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Alex Sawyer. T. H. Phillips had the misfortune to break his auto quite seriously last Friday. The Woodland Union Sunday school teacher training class resumed their regular class meetings la: Thursday evening, meeting with Mr: Alex Sawyer. The full membership esent. After the study hour, e was spent in playing games and music. A light lunch was served. The next meeting will be November 3, Arthur Carlson was a busi er in Cass Lake last Thursda; Mrs. Henry Sawyer and family and Fred Murphy and T. H. Phillips mo- tored to Bemidji Sunday and spent the day, returning the same evening. Mrs. A. B. Frost returned from s call- its'complete fall. With starvation now confronting huge num- bers of its populatlo_n, it will profit little by, the switching of food| fordrinks. No nation has ever found it to pay, and Russia will be no exception. . ~. " DAILY PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS __ [tored to Cass Lake on business last the teachers’ institute Sunday eve- ning. Elvena Berg spent Thursday night with Miss Ruby Sawyer. Edwin and Alfred Rogholt mo- Wednesday afternoon. Arthur Leathy gave a house-warm- ling dance in his dwelling last Sat-[\_________ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rock and|When it flew back and-struck him. Nelson with their returned from Miss Beulah Sewell and Miss Lila Elliott were attending the teachers All the Pinewood young peaple who attended the dance at Solway last * BUCK LAKE * | that he ‘was running into the planer, ! Nels Hanson of Sugar Bush, moved his family onto the Martin Rogholt, Jr., p]ace Saturday. They will spend the winter here, Mr. and-Mrs. Harry, Gates and son spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Anderson. _Don’t forget the social that will be given by the Buck Lake school, under the auspices of the teacher, Mrs. A, B. body is invited. All come and enjoy a -pleasant evening. Ladies please bring box lunch. The proceeds will go for the benefit of the school. sort for hunters. A car or two have season opened. . Mr. Mackie of Cass Lake was seen in our neighborhood last Saturday. Ed Larson is working with his team at Bena. by ITAMINES are an essential factor in promoting healthful growth Scott’s Emulsion is far richer in the fat soluble A vitamine than cream. It aids growth—builds health! AT ALL DRUG STORES PRICE, $1.20 and 60c. 21-1s e e This year — just as every other year—the coming of the Holidays will find hundreds of people, who . have waited until the last month— desiring ~ photo- graphs; and risk- * The Dugas lodge is a favorite re- | come out every Sunday since the duck I EE SRS AR SR 58 8 ¥ ISLAND LAKE * KRR RR KRR KKK KK KR Miss Mina Stout motored up with Alfred Allandslee to visit her folks,| Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Stout. Harvey Rustvold d William (O’Leary came over in Whelan’s car Tuesday on which they had been mak- | ing repairs. { Wallace Whelan attended the au tion sale at Dickens’ home Tuesda; Ralph Porter accompanied Wallas Whelan home from the auction*saie: Tuesday evening the Misses Stout and Florence Hall entertaindd’at the Whelanhome. ¥ | Mr. and Mrs. Tom Anderson mo- tored to Island Lake Wednesday evi ning and William O’Leary and Ha ey Rustvold accomp: d them hom. Clarence Allandsice has been work-| ing. on the new hospital at Red Lake for the past week. dy Mr. and Mrs. S. Sellers and Will- iam_Shooks . visited at Stout’s Wed- nesday. Misses .Olivia Roy and Dorothy and, Wallace Whelan and Ralph Por- ter visited Crookston Camp Saturday noon and had an enjoyable dinner. | Misses . Olivia Roy and Dorothy Porter and Waliace Whelan were en- tertained at'the Tom Anderson home for supper and visited Harvey Rust- vold, who was ill. Misses Florence Hall and Mina Stout and Clarence evening there. Mrs. Whelan and Misses Olivia Roy Florence Hall and Dorothy Porter, and John.Whelan spent Sunday at the Anderson home. Miss Verna. MacRae returned to Island Lake Sunday afternoon. | Fargo, N. D., Oct. 25.—Work Has | commenced on the erection of a new factory for the American Bottling Works here to cost $15,000. DAILY PIONEER LILY OF THE VALLEY FLOUR None Better Made exclusively from North Dakota Hard Spring Wheat —BY— CAVALIER MILL- ING COMPANY CAVALIER, NORTH DAKOTA FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS BEMIDJI BRANCH Wm. McCuaig AGENT PHONE NO. 1 Bemidji Minn. Tired Feet Massage gently with soothing ertholatin Cools, rests and refreshes “The Littlp Nurse ) Jor Littie 1™ BEHIND THE COUNTER ! {s where you must look for indications of the purity of the drugs you buy. At our prescription counter you will find we_believe in utter spot- lessness. . Every man who handles our. prescriptions is employed _because we have confidence in* his ‘ability to ‘drugs. We wery i best in- gredients.. /0 —whfch will assure you of your winter’s supply before the impending railroad strike becomes effective—Oct, 30, 1921. Bemidji Lumber & Fuel Co. Opposite Great Northern Depot _Telephone 100 BEMIDJi, MINN. DAILY PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS ing disappoint- ment. +\It is much better to sit be- fore the rush be- gins, , Make an appointment to- ay. oot HAKKERUP STUDIO €< Wonderful little journeys from Jour hotel or bun- galow. Like turning the pages of a picture book. Scenes from old Spain; Missions, bells, chanting friars. Scenic mountains. Peaks where they keep all the snow this wonderland knows, Vaileys clus- tered with blooming orchards. The smiling Pacific, colorful beaches. Catalina; Big Trees; Yosemite, June days all winter. Sunshine and flowers. The LOS 'ANGELES LIMITED, all Pullman—exclusively first-class—gives you the fastest and most luxurious service to Southern California—less than three days from Twin Cities. See Salt Lake City ‘en route. ] Your through sleeper leaves Minneapolis via North Western Line every day the year round at 6:15 P. M., St. Paul 6:55, and goes on the Los Angeles Limited next morning at Omaha. The CONTINENTAL LIMITED. another good train, leaves Omaha 1:20 A. M. (sleeper ready 1 P. M.) C ieut comrections ot Omaha with morning trains from Twin Cities, Write for illustrated booklet “‘California, Calls You® _For information, ask your Local Ticket Agent, or . Mawlew, Gea'l Agent, U. P. Svstem, 3 Life Bldg., 125 S. Third St., Minneapolis v E. 1 618 Metropolitan Phone Main gas6 Union Pacific SVStem e e R

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