Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 27, 1922, Page 6

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PUBLISHED, DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY:BY." BLMIDJ! PIONEER PUBLISHING COMP: G.E CAI{SON Presldenl E. H. DENU, Secy M, J. D. WINTER, News Editor TELEPHONE 922-923 Entered at th -(omoa u,sm wn. as Becand-chan h ‘au»i 18’ m’ ] Bl PSS I bt 13 b AL A ST MEMBER, NATIONAL EDITORIAL. ABSOCIATION Forsign uvmuhq Bepreseataives . 8. C. Thels Co. Chicago, Ill, and Naw York, N. Y. ttention paid to_anonymous . contributions. R, st -..‘2' be known to.the editor, but not aecessarily for publication. Calnhllnleltlnnfi ‘::r the Weekly . Pl r must reach this office Tu.o > E?n” k to fusure publication'in the eur- rent 1..!]‘ sy Une year... 8ix Months gnn:(m::tm gg Bix Months .. One Wk . 3% Three Months ... THE WEEKLY PIONEER—TW¢ every Thursday and sent pos tor, in advance, $2.00. TR edit 18 given this paper, only: the m.gnil:.:nffuad to !)‘u use for re-publication of n.ll news -dispatches creditea to it, or otherwise and ;t’ha local news published hereln. ommeownmmmm ADVICE TG MERCHANTS It will be remembered that congress appointed last year a joint committee of the house and senate to investigate agricultural affairs and to suggest possible legislation for the permanent assistance of agncnlturl.l development.- The- chairman of this committee is Congressman Sidney Anderson from Minnesota. The reports which- have come from this committee are both interesting and suggestive. Several bills have already been introduced in con- gress as a result of the work of this committee. The Lenroot-Anderson bill which proposes adequate credit facilities.for agriculture represents one of the most important conclusions of the committee. 1t is doubtful if any congressional committee ever had more importaiit work to do, of ever tried more faithfully to accomplish results than did this com- mittee headed by Congressman Anderson, In connection with an investigation of agricul- tural affairs,” the joint agricultural investigation committee referred to, also made a study of the industries which serve agriculture. In a recent in- terview published in the St. Paul Pioneer Press, Mr. Anderson has a few things to say about the agericies of distribution for the things the farmer buys. After calling attention to-the desirability of siniplifying as much as possible these agencies of distzibution and fitting production to consumptive demands, Mr. Anderson makes a very thoughtful statement about the merchant who serves the farm- er. . “Therc is one thing I must say Eboutthe individual “He must awaken merchant, s Mr. Anderson. to the fact that he is in reality the community buy- er. It is the community he should attempt to serve. As a matter of fact, he usually operates as the manufacturer’s outlet. He allows himself to be cajdled into handling what the manufacurer wants to sell instead of what the community wants to buy, He should awaken to the fact that he is the community buyer and that it is to the communit’ that he owes his allegiance. It pays his profits.” There is a world of wisdom in this thought of saving waste at the point in the chain of distribu- tion where the farmer first makes contact with the outside world.—The Farmer. PLEASANT VALLEY BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER to be purchased for the.girls. Coffin -read: the Club : paper. NEW BUS ROUTES ! '/ %Annotncement that a regular auto. bus service is to e inaugirdted between Bemidji and Internation- al Falls brings home with added emphasi growth of this new method of travel, which ever énlarged competition with steam transporta- tion. \ One thing is certain, the automobile passenger. Toutes are growing by leaps and botinds in all parts of the conntry At the sent time there are neapolis, ,ahd prob. ing for ather routes Between: the . Cit uhda.!lochester, vehicle service has met with such favor that spe- cially deslgned high power, luxuriously equlpped llmousmeQ are being mstalled.n 1t is said’ this Aerv- ice is the most pre!entwus from the comfort stand- point of any in the United States. There are spe- _,cial compartments for passengers and one sec- “tion is much like the drawing room on a Pullman car. 3 So numerous are the lines upenhng in the Min- neapolis zone that the varidus motor trunspom- tion companies have got together.on the idea of establishing a union station. Bemidji is so situated that additional routes will continuously be put into operation here; linking still more closely outside territery.with this most desirable trading and distributing point. Whether the general utilization of this theans of travel will force the rail rates down is an inter- estng speculation, not without the ‘haza however, of so embarrassing the railroads as to cause. com- plete readjustment. In any eveh&,flge wise xgflrond ¢ in this day and age will exert itself to the utmost to give service and general satlsfacuon to the traveling public. Competition is the spicé’of h‘afle Sl BENEFIT ENTIRE' mu:lopi she. magorly President Harding takes, u;g broad, t},e natumal . view, of the Lakes-to-Ocea waterway.- course, is the only proper view to take. If only this Great Lakes region were to benefit from the St. Lawrence pro;ecc, there might be reason for indifference or oppomlon on the part of other sections, but this deep waterway from the Atlantic seaboard to the producmg heart of the continent would redound in benefit to the entire nation.—Wisconsin News, Milwaukee. ———t Mary Garden has quit as director of the Chicago Grand Opera company. The s”e;sori’s losses are said to be more than a million dollars. Backers of the opera are glad to get out of the Gardén busi- ness. . Thxt, of =8 Now they have a new fangled thing by means of which you can hitch a radio apparatus to an ordi- nary electric light bulg, but no one has fourid a way to keep the meter from going around. “Just give me time, that’s all I ask,” declares Pussyfoot Johson. And the moonshiners say that is what he ought to have. § ] However the®good woman files, either as Mrs. Peter or Anna- Dickie, her name is apt td be Dennis in November. —. ., Latin isn't the only ‘dead” language. stance, “The police caught a burglar.” “All right, Legion boys, let's all stand and sing, “Bring Back My Bonus to Me.” ; § $ With moonshine at $30 a quart, beggars can’t be.-baozers. A For in- Chas. | & Other The Pleasant Valley Farmers’ Club_meeting for the first Wednes- day in May, announced to be. held at_the Charles Durand farm will be held at the home of Levi Foster instead. Francis Lee installed A, A. Steph- ani’s_telephone in his new house, Monday. . Robert Hedglin moved the family into.the old Hedglin homestead near the W. S. Fauhl homestead, this week. ;l;lhe plntce has noth:)een occupied ffir e past six or eif ars tho the ‘hay has been cug frz’r!n ihe mdow each year. Mr. Maag) called the ‘wetdrinary out from Bemidji last Thursday to attend a sick animal, He had start- ed to drive to Bem but one of his horses was suddenly taken sick by the time he got to Puposky. Prmmpal A. M. Ripple magde up a dny in school Saturday when he held school in the high school room. The girls prepared a fine lunch in the new kitchen at noon, of veal cutlets, salad ner, i’atets, Lee and Coffin were in- vited to attend at lunch, Ira Cook transacted busi u in Bemidji -Saturday, son Atleigh taking care of the janitor work in Mr. Cook’s absence. Miss Belle Vogler had as her guest Friday night, Miss Dorothy Watson, who i§ & student. in ‘the high St«ph;m was “quite ill ]aut weke but is fully recovered now. s Ketten was a guest at the Gardner “Home “over ‘the week-end: Norman Gardner called at the A. gtmonfhome and at E. R. Lée's| ai y_a temoon i#s ~ Nina Coo) §fi(l£l student was out of daya mst week_gn wqu»t of sncknass Gme Hgdghn and Edmond Fos- ter made a business call at E. R. Lee’s Saturday afternoon. pie, etc., and Messrs. Gard-)Sunda interesting matters were- discussed. The society holds its regular monthly ‘meeting on Shird Ffidly evening of the month ‘at the! cbnsolidated school house: - E. R. Lee was transacting business in Bemidji lastweek. g The McClellan boys are working on a cross-country road in Iv&é Ridge township to-enable the McClel an children to get to:school. over three miles direct road instead.of having to go such a long distance as had to be done all Jast fall. The telephone - service over the|g Maple ridge line is largely no service at all -at present, and has been for the past several weeks. Miss “Alice Henderson was .an over-night guest of Belle Vogler Sunday. - Mr, and Mrs. McQueeneny and sons | & Baymond nd Glenn were guests at|§ ithe A. A. Randail home Sunday. | Mr. and Mys. J. A. Bye, Miss. Alice Hendetson l!pd DMiss _Belle [Vogler werd guests at the Watson home Mrs. H. N inbotham and son |3 Cecil h1:n were _dinner | 3 x\laltnmt e.Cook home Sunday. Mr. Mre.-A. M. Ripple and '.‘hfldnm were calling in Nebish Sun-|3 day afternoon. 1§t Mr an&&rs N, L, Knox xndd Mrs. | Darrél 8nson . Were Vvisi 'md Mrs. Clrl Nelson Sunda; d&;— st S ez&h.?m:‘;-:%mt Sptmg seeding has just begun here {$ On’ account of the late season, not much wheat will be seeded. The ac- reage being seeded to oats is practic- ally double what it was last year and much clover is being put in. A vast amount of new clearing is being Belle Vogler and Alice Hen- visited ”“Dorothy Randall helnn. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES WIR"’ NG rkv oun SE| wca WHEN We carry a full stock of N-!ibiul Mauzda Lamp. —WE DELIVER— JHALING--WALKER ELECTRIC CO. .‘.2‘-.‘.“."“&.‘ Let us show you. ant Valley Literary Soc- 1 evening at the school hause “with a good attendan-e. A ‘Basket ety m formoeg H:‘:?:.,':v.u vote and uniforms, ' I Officer Frustrated Ac}l!ltl-; The name of Gystavus Ohlinger | Taight have meant gomething to the Xkaiser during the war, and it did. The German socl- eties that were rampant during the period knew well Captain Gus- tavus Ohlinger of the Intelligetice department of the United States. He broke. up their meetings - and many of these s0- cleties and - their -ctivitles ceased to operate by reason of hig learning so much of their prop- aganda and plottings. His home is in Toledo, 0. where the American Legion has as its com- mander this’same Gustavus Ohlinger. The Legion convention was in’full blast in his home city when a wealthy Toledoan burst jn ‘and announced that he would pay the entire expense of the ex-gervice men’s gathering if they would drop their bonus stand.’ What Olg,h,mer told him was never learried from a five-foot shelf, but it was good enough to cause a hurried exit on the part of the '.l‘nledo business man. That's why the Leglnnnuirel like him. Kid gloves ‘mighf be' ‘alright to use sometimes, but Ohlinger doesn’t draw them on when hé tackles Legion prob- lems. p o 2 Born of German parentage in China, a close friend of the late “Theodore Roosevelt, world traveler and mmed as having ridden a blcyde across | South "Africa are a few of the things that show why "Gus" standy§ ace high with the Legion men and-‘alSo wly e must be reckoned with by any group whose 'Americanism ls questionable, LEGION PAPER'S BOSS SCRIBE Philip, Hp]. Formerly Editor of. ovor- seas - Publication, at é Hoosier Publlenlon i lt is sald that every towm and vll- lage in Indiana boasts at least one au- thor whose writ- ings: bave won some dégree of fame_ jn the lit- erary world. Reared in . this atmosphere so fa- ‘yorable ‘to scrib- blers, it was in- evitable that Hoosler mem- bers of the Amer- icdn Leglon should ., desire somie. mediuin of 5 expression for their Deglon fdeas. The result was the establtshment of the Hoosler Leglonnaire, w) hich recent- ly started publication with a circula- tion of 32,000. ; Philip- B: Stapp” of Green. rg, for- merly editor of the Hour Glass, over-: seas publication of the “Sauntering Seventh” division, is editor of the In- diana pllbllcntlon A elegate to the Parls caucus of the. Legion, Stapp was appointed a member of the first na- tional publicity committee of the IA' gion. During his 26 months of serv- ice in the war, Stapp rose frof “buck private” to a commissioned- officer in the field' artillery. The newspaper is sent to all Indi- ana Leglonraires every week. B > . Nearly Dozen Dastroyers Which Wore Coveted Gold Star on Stacks, Are Doomed. —_— 5 A typewriter has at last defeated nearly a dozen of the destroyers which for four years zigzagged -through the North-sea and in the submarine zone of the Atlantic and gained notable vic- tories over German submarines. - The coveted gold stars, worr on the stacks, where all might see and know that a German sub had met *death, were fwprded the -Parker, O'Brien, .Cum- mings, Porter, Davis and many oum-s W hlcll“mfifibeen orliéred “oiit of com- by the Navy department. “Qut of commissfon” means nothing more or less than that the fast grow- ing navy junk pile grows higher. Never again, probably, will these gréyhounds of.the deep circle around a fleet of triinsports, snddenl: dive; off tb; one side., iveep Bag aggflm a:depth bemb, and tl&l wtty come’ to surface that slows another German submurine has gone down to visit Davy Jones.: 4 The thrills of the deeds of these “star” destroyers are a bit overshad- ovhd by the news that the Shaw is slated for the scrap heap, too. She was escorting the huge British transport Aquitania when the. rudder jammed ond the giant ship ran her down. The Jiicob Jones also brings back sad mem- ories. She is named for the first jll- fated torpedo boat of that name which was smnk while battling:in the subma- rine zone. gummmulmmmmmmmmufimfimummmn_mfil MANY’ “UT OF COMMISSION” | HUISDALEVENING, APRIL 27, 1922 ==iIIIIIIIIIlllllll!lllllllll!lll'l II|il!lllllllllllllllfll!'ll!!l!!l"l‘lmll“lllIIIIIIIlIlIIl{E BEMI 4 # "~ 10tk STRE B. W. LAKIN, President 2ImMOOR Ulp Garts Tl lNNBAPOLlS The Norllx:::l s Largut and Most chmfnl Hostelry . Al me Outside and Eich Room has Private Bath TARIFF: 75 Rooms (Private Baths) Single at $2.00—Double $3.00 328 Rooms (Private Baths) Single at $2:50—Double $3.50 . 200 Rooms (Private-Baths) Sin; le at $3 00—Double $4.00 Others from $4.00 to-$15.00 IIlIIlII|lIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIHIIlIIIIIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E.R. EVANS, Manager C. L. ISTEB. Secretary.Treasurer DJI LUMBER- & FUEL CO. OPPOSITE GREAT NORTHERN DEPOT 1T BUILDING MATERIAL ‘snd FUEL Lf-:i’nom:‘ j00 T pPhoMP " Hard aud'Soft Caal; Briquétts, Blacksmith. Coal JUST ARRIVED—A full line of Building Papers, Deadening Felt and Composi n Roofinl.—GET ‘OUR PRICES FIRST! -—GET OUR PRICRS FIRS'I'-—- WE BUY AND SELL New and Second-Hand FURNITURE STOVES, RANGES, BEDS, etc. —Phone 300— Meblamond Son mnewh Ave. ST Blcycles and Furniture ’Repamng Phone 897 10th and Irvine Ave. Jake's Repair Shop (NS S SN —— We will return your washing in excellent condition, just as you would want it done. AFTER ALL, THE ONLY 'WAY to get well when you are ill is to call a good: doctor and have him prescribe for you. That is where we come in to serve you with our good, fresh, strong drugs,. com: pounded_ as your doctor or- ders. Then with careful nursing,” you ought-to- res-~ cover. ity Dru Store I.ALI ERTE & IR]GKSON Phéné B2 Bemidjt Try sending your wash- ing out this summer. Family Washings 10c 1b—80c minimum Bem. Steam Laundry e ~ —%Phone 195— 1 g ) A PLEASANT | ECONOMY “MNLEANLINESS is next to i | Aiatge ends, of ¢ t pull out. i teeth to the section. H Drop in somé day scon and let us show you this lnm-om. 4 ~\We-can farnish you the Umvé‘fifit Because,éach tooth is notched nmo the tooth-bar, is held in place @ strong malleable clamp, and is n tlfilt into the bat by a large bolt and tension-locked nut, the teeth of our John Decre Universal harrows always stay tight. ‘These harrows are especially for stony or rooty ground. ‘The convenient levers-are provided with a spring-relief—when . tke ‘tooth strikés an’ Obstruction the" spring allows the tooth bars to turn go that the tooth passes over the obstruction without being bent; and-the tooth bars immediately return to proper position. ‘Theé- frame constriction of long wear. ‘The tooth_bars are made of ithout useless weiglit. rivet ‘and heavy steel tooth bar inthe end rails—+tHe toof 60 Steel Teeth—cuts 10 feet—2 Sechons T — "f ,*. $19.60 Cash GIVEN HARDWARE godliness.” Let us keep your suits or frocks in immaculate condi- tion and it will “intensify your charm. .- Besides, it’s true economy to have your clothes Dry Cleaned. as it adds’months of enjoyment an service to their life. . “You are-as near the Master Cledners as _the closest Patcel Postoffice:” Bemidji Cleaners & Tailors N. Papermaster,” Mgr. Phone 578 Kaplan Bldg. _ this harrow insures. durability and bar steel wHich insures strength™" - in orie; two, three or four sections with twenty-five. thirty, ‘of Wfivg Use use 3 , Brodutts Teetronm ence has devised to make milk clean and safe. ~ Koors Pasteurized Milk for your protection.

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