Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
G. E. CARSON, President G. W. HARWNWELL, Editor THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER J / PUBLISHED -EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. IEEEE R LR RS R X LAVINIA * FEEE TSRS R R R B 00 0 | ' N. A. LaDouceur has secured a posi- tion at Laqua’s clothing store in the E. H. DENU, Sec. and Mgr. |ghoe deépartment and will not move J. D. WINTER, City Editor Ito Duluth with his family as was for- —_TELEPYONE 922.923 Entered at the Postoffice at Bemidji, Minn . under Act of Congress of M Second-class Matter, 879, MEMBER OF NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION {merly intended. We are glad to know | they will be among us this winter. | In returning from Bemidji Sunday evening of last week Mrs. Fred Raddi |of Frohn township was severely| bruised and shaken up owing to an Foreign Advertising Representatives 8, C, Thels Co., Chicago, 11, 8. C. Theis Co.. New: York, N. Y, By Carrier One YeaTl soeev-e Six Months Three_Month: ©One Month One Weck .. No attention paid to anonymous contributions. known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication, i ‘Weekly Pioncer must reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week tobruise insure publication in the current issue. SUBSCRIPTION EATES S50 oo vear 189 six Months 156 .15 Three Months . danger of might be hoped for. Asi tiveness of war. Counting the might assume. betterments. Thirty each. tary preparedness, plete success. possible for | trade. doubled. houses of the city. dental attention, bears out that fact. neglect of their teeth. 0 3 NEER—Twelve pages, THE WEBKLY PIONEER—)SEKe Rald to any add ‘Unless credit is given this paper, only the United 8 for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it, or hlso the local news published herein, OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS as much as the cost of buildi i nits time one of the greates highway, at a cost of $50,000 per mile—hig] fifty national highways across the country East and West, and%(t Aty fifty similar highways across the country North .:md South. g billion dollars would build and equip a college injpirch wood to town Wednesday. as in money, and feeling the burden of taxation inc i the American people are w1llmg_ that thglr representatives shall go to the utmost extent consistent with honor and safety in the effort to summer were surprised at the | crowded together into a sma ) park, in which tourist campers made their su periods extending from a day to two or three weeks. Next year the number will undoubtedly be doubled and the question is go- ing to arise, “Where are we going to put_them?” The space is very limited which can be used for camping purposes. Whether the Park Board has in mind this question or not at this time, it will not be a good plan to wait until the campers begin to arrive before attention is given to the matter. If it is the Park Board to acquire the remaining strip of land between the present park limits on the north and the Grand Forks Bay cottages, which is not now a part of the par!(, it} should by all means be done. At no time in the future will it be possible to acquire land at the price it may be bought for now, and the city of Bemidji is going to need every square foot .ot' park space it can acquire to take care of the summer tourist published e, $ in .\ to the advi entitled WHAT THIRTY BILLIONS WILL DO If limitations of armaments can ¢ war, or reduce the expense o it will be well worth while even if it does not accomp de from their own national honor and | G Sopent with mus safety, there is scarcely anything the people of this nation wanti Mr. and Mrs. Hanscom pleasantly more than they want relief from tax burdens and the destruc-|cptertained the school children at a What would not thirty billion dollars do? Thrity billion dollars wou United States, free from debt, and each of the states and in Hawaii and the .Philippir.les at a cost| of $200,000,000 each and leave twenty_bllhons with whi erect and equip one hundred thousand high schools at $200,0001 o B e (. TIME NOW T OGET READY FOR NEXT SUMMER Those who visited Diamond Point Park periodically lastipuneral services were conducted Mon- arge number of tents which were 11 space at the north end of the mmer homes for It has been conservatively estimated that 6,000 people used Diamond Point Park last summer outside of Bemidji peo- ple. Adding to this number the number who pass through the city each day and will use the park when they know there are| accommodations to take care of them, the number will be|gane. Mr. and Mrs, Will Kruft and O UNFORTUNATE BUT VALUABLE INFORMATION Out of 526 children examined at the dental clinié, in the Central school Friday, only seven were found who needed no| This is less than one and one-half per cent. It can scarcely be believed that only three children out of every two hundred have not defective teeth, and yet actual proof! The care of children’s teeth is one of the most necessary precautions parents can take, both for the child’s health and for the sake of its progress in school. have had the cause of their delinquency traced directly to the cent means. Region. S — S — ko OVERHEARD BY EXCHANGE EDITOR NO UNANIMITY IN THIS Commissioner Imsdahl now knows what less than one half of one per It’s the amount of road money allotted to him as compared with the amount residents of his district are demanding of him.—Baudette 5,00 1d buy all the railroads of the! ich to|Mr make the conference a com- Many delinquent children auto without, lights colliding with her team./Shé was thrown from the — | buggy butiescaped serious injury. Writer's name must be|mib = & e anieations Tor the The two horses were badly cut and Mps, Cora fandray returned Wed- nesday. to the home of her father, G. S. Wheeler of Big Bass lake. She I has been suffering from inflammatory {xheumatism -at.-the - Bemidji--hospital {Tor some time but we ave glad to 5 report that she is much better. ¢/ One of the best meetings of the {summer of the ‘v Eavinia Christian | Endeavor was. held Sunday night at herwiysicreditod: ""I}thc school house. The subject was {“The Golden Rule.” A large attend- {ance was noted. Services begin at 7:30 {next Sunday. | Vernon Hoar was transacting busi- heck war or reduce thei‘ncss in the cities this week. f military preparedness, lish all that| Wheeler and Mrs. R. A, them at their Tuesday night. The evening and cards. Friends of Mr. surprised | home |'Hallowe’en party at their home Satur- day night. The kiddies report a fine most in money only, the European war_cost lay nig ! oles 0 : the United States more than $30,000,060,000—:l hundred tlmesi}:““f with lots to eat and “heaps of ng the Panama Canal, considered| t undertakings the United States B. A .Hoar returned Tuesday from | Minneapolis where he. was visiting | relatives for two wecks, He was called | there by the death of his sister. Miss, June Baird had nisfor- !tune to cut her foot severely, while leave ten billion dollars fori playing ncar her. houe! Wednesday. Little Paul Sathre of Big Bass Thirty billion dollars would build 600,000 miles of the best | lake is still recovering nicely, frou hway enough to 1ayi infantile paralysis. He is, however, partially deprived of the use of thc | Bud LaDouceur took a load of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Utich, Mr. and N. A. LaDouceur and Mr. and ! Mrs. S. Tell were callers at the C. B. Lucky Strike cottage and surround- Counting the cost of war, in suffering and loss of life as welllings is the most lonely spot in Lavinia. n incident to mili-| The occupants, Misses Ida and Myrtle Helmar, left Friday for their home near Browerville, Minn. The entire community was shocked to learn of the death of their loved neighbor and friend, Mrs. C. B. Cross, who died at her home near Little | Bass lake Friday night after a short illness of a few hours of pneumonia. day afternoon by Rev. Lambert of Bemidji from the residence at 2 o’clock. Beautiful flowers of the rar- est varied completely covered the lovely casket which was carried to its last resting place by six young men of the community, Messrs. Forbes, Wanroe, Lester, Prather, Lester and Zieders. All of the chil- dren were: in attendance except one daughter, Mrs. Maude Yaeger of Glendora, Cal. Sympathy is extended to Mr. Cross and grandchild, Vivia M Cross, in their sad hour. , _ William Gish has been on the sick list this week but is reported to be improviig. % . Alfred Endstrgm’ from Fargo, N. D bas just finished a new home on his farm near Homer Robinson. He| m'gm‘is soon to bring his family to their new home, “Yum, “yuni! Methinks me smells saucrkraut. Some one had better ad- vise Mr. and Mrs. James Lester to put a lock on their cellar door. Delbert Cross, Mr. and Mrs. R. | Mrs. Della Willy left Thursday mor- The Park Board has it within its power to bring to Bemidji|ning in autos for their homes in North many thousands of dollars which are clear velvet to the business Let us make sure all who want to come next summer will have camping space provided for them. Dakota. They are all. relatives ‘of C. B. Cross. -} 3 [k BRI R R RS * NORTHWEST ANGLE . x REAKR AR KRR KRR R RS Joseph Melancon, who has been fishing with Ole Meliand at Monument bay auring the past few weeks, start- ed out for.Oak 1sland early Thursday morning lgst week in his small row- boat and it took him two and a half days to make the eight miles. He got turned around in some Way among the many islands and got lost. Sleep- ing outside for two nghts, and with| nothing to cat, made the aged man |of sixty years look very weak and | haggard when he landed at the Oak| Island dock. He left for Ironton, Minn., Sunday t ospend the winter. | Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Brown have moved over to Canada for the win- ter where Mr. Brown intends to try and ship fish from Falcon island. | “Sport” Sperling of Warroad was out here the past few days duck hunt- ing and he bagged s few birds to show his friends the accuracy of his (gun. o Some Indians seem to think that we will have a very late fall. They | say the muskrats don’t seem to be.in Good-bye to the Rubber Sac? " The pen at the right is the marvelous Dunn. Pen, the THE pen at the left is a rubber sac self-filler —the barrel s more than half full of rub- ber. It holds only 26 drops of ink. tain Pen with the > Jtholds several tim ink a8 the rubber sac pen of the and you van pump it full in a iffy. le Red s much e The marvelous DUNN-PEN The Fountain Pen with the Little Red Pump-Handle TheDunn-Penhasnorubbe K, clog, or flood, and automatically cle: while youare filling it. tbsoindely gu 4Siuple Parts 4 Popular Pen-Points 4 Standard Styles 4 Dollurs Fverywhere Gin the U. 8.) PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE no hatry té build their wigwams. and | weasels -ave already snow-white and {no snow in the moon. | Bern Smith received his buck ram last week' to complete his; herd of ‘sheep. It came from a pedigreed ranch | down in Morristown and makes a { fine addition to Bern’s flock. Oliver Smith’s reputation as & ohim- ey builder is getting much publicity turound here these days. He has just icompleted chimneys for George Os- { wald on American point and Thomas Butterfield on Oak island. { The census taker of 1920 could +have “padded” his returns by 150 more without injury to his work in | Northwest Angle. i Frank Streif returned from War- gl'pnd Fri ¢ last to resume his posi- ition as clerk in the Oak Mercantile | compan, Islands appeal to him more than his lold stamping grounds ever did andy {he will remain here for the winter. “Spike" Dorgen, the popular mes-{ store. Frank says that the | possible endorsement for | PE-RU-NA i a senger on the Great Northern railway out of Warroad, took back his allot- ment of the feathered game, wnich included mallards, spoonbills and coots. The potato growers up in the Angle raised a crop of excellent tubers both as to yield and size this year. Frank | Reed and Dave Sloan both brought down a boafload which they disposed | of at Oak Island. BRUIN HAD SENSE OF HUMOR ;,‘No Other E; é’gTaking Pic of “His) Enemy in bs Huniliating Flight, AFor a long time bears have been| known to be humorous, but not -untit a few days ago was it demonstrated that a~black bear, if properly ap-| proached, witl:displgy artistic leanings, remarks a writer in the New York | Sun. Somewhere in the dim lore of bruini ' genérations there ' may haya}! been bears that had artistic incliny- tlon or the subject of this story may be the advance agent of a new ultra tendency in wild life. Kvery supposi- tion, however, fails to explain satis- factorily how a black bear in the wil- derness of the Allegheny park could| learn enough about a camera to take pictures. Nevertheless, it is true that at least one bear kng photography, accord- ing to K. S. Craig, 2 forester from the New York State College of Forestry. Craig is enguged by the park com- mission to assist in making a study of the timber growth in the new state park, Black bears have always been plentiful in this section, where the Allegheny river winds through the mountains down to the Ohio. Craig ‘was cruising through the forest gath-| ering timber data. He left his canlera | on a log and ‘was looking around for a lanation of Animal’s /. Taste is a matter of tobacco quality Chesterfield We state it as our honest belief ‘ { that the tobaccos used in ‘Chestersi: " = % field" are of finer'‘quality (ang: hence of better taste) than in any" other cigarette at the price: ' Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. CIGARETTES of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended good subject to snap when he discov- |, ered a big black bear browsing in some berry bushes. | Craig was surprised. He neg[ected' to think of the camera in the concen- trated effort to place distance . be- tween himself and the bruin. . He ran down the trail back to the camp and informed two companions of the pres- ence of the black bear. ‘The three men went back to the spot, but the bear had disappeared. The camera Craig left on the log was still where he placed it, but a plate had been ex- posed. This did not attract attention until the plate was developed and IIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIlIIIII’:" al HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES BICYCLES AND SUPPLIES EA LT T T showed him in rapid flight down the trail, d | R | Subscribe for Tne Dally Ploneer | - | Heavy Cold? Chest | " All Clogged Up? ON'T let jt get a start, Dr. King's New Discovery will . get right down to work, relieving the tight feeling il the- chest,’ quieti i cough, gently thus climinating the cold poisons. Always reliable.” Just goed medicine nrade to case colds and coughs. the bowels, For- fifty £ dard remedy. All the fa an take it with helpful ‘gestlts, ~ the children’s croup. No harmf: ., Convincing, heal- ing; taste. thak thie'kiddies like. At all druggists, 604, .« Dr. King’s New Discovery For Colds and Cougfi TFeel Badly? Bowels Sluggish? Haven't any “pep’”” in work or play. You're constipated! The stithulating action of Dr. King’s Fills brings back old time energy. All druggists, 25c. PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE . King’s Pills i : : | FINE SHOE REPAIRING Rear 201 Minnesota Ave. One Door East of Miller’s Repair Shop WILL BE PLEASED TO MEET ‘MY CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS HERE. F. J. Catteyson 103 RN 20T ) ) [ CATARRH] OF THE STOMACH OU; CAN'T ENJOY . LIFE with a sore, sour, bloated stom- i E g, it is alsourke of miscry, causing pains, bekhing,zdizziness and head. aches, | B @ The pesén with a bad stomach should besatisfied with nothing less H than permanent, lasting relief. o q The right remedy will act upon the }} linings of the stomach, enrich the blood, I/ aid in casfing out the catarthal poisons and strengthen every bodily function. @ The large number of peaple who have suscessfully used Dr. Hartman's g o e, recommended for all ns, offer the strongest IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS 0 E ) ] (e TABLETS OR LIQUID B SOLD EVERYWHERE I I £ | RATES DOWN THE WEST HOTEL Minneapolis, Minn. Now Quoting Rooms at - $1.50 to $2.00 Without Bath $2.00 to $5.00 With Bath ! Moderate Priced Cafe in Connection —— i -_ Léf the Radiator | "~ Doctors Fix It. All Work Guarantggd_ Now Located at - 507 Third St. THE NEW Radiator Hospital At City Livery Barn —— CHRISTMAS TOKENS of af- fection are best arranged for now | free. f)fqi]z A,sz’ bustle 'nn'ci gonfu- sion’, of ghe. holi~ day season. Give photographs " for Christmas — and arrange for' an | appointment at once. ' HAKKERUP STuDIo N RELIABILITY Let your conscience be your guide and send your prescrip- tions here to be filled. But we must rely on our test tubes to get the exact amounts. A pr iption filled by us means it is filled with every possible care of the expert druggist. W, PRESCRIPTIONS i Aol B Bemidji WRIGLEYS ' “gfter Every Meal” - Everywhere all over the ‘world people ‘use this goody &> for its benefits. as well as its pleasure, .Ke’eps‘ teeth clean, ‘breath sweet, ‘throat soothed, -~ and ¢ digestion,