Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 9, 1922, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

] ¢ ; i PAGE SIX ey e e FOLLOW THE CROWDS JOHNSON’S for HOSIERY The Store that has BBrou'gI;t the Low Prices to BUNGALOW CHILDREN’S APRONS HOSE Our Price 5 pair for 50c $1.00 Ladies’ nad Misses’ ” Patent Leather HAND’CHIEFS BELTS See them at See them at 4c each 29c¢ YOU CANT BEAT JOHNSON'S FOR MILLINERY HAIR NETS PLAY SUITS 3 for 25¢ 59¢ Children’s School WAISTS! WAISTS! DRESSES Wenderful array of Waists—ma- terials, Voile, Dimity, Batiste, etc. See them here at See them at 95¢ 95¢ HOUSE PURE SILK HOSE DRESSES Coll;:gi;!;::ck About ?:’:mtl choose We say they are wonders $1.95—up 98¢ corsErs | FIBERSIERHOSE Colors, White, Brown, Black 98c—up '49‘: Ladies’ Fine Ribbed BRASSIERES UNION SUITS 9 Buy these here at Johnson’s i 49¢ Batiste All Leather BLOOMERS HAND BAGS Flesh color Your choice 39¢ $1.00 SILK SATEEN BLOOMERS Cfi“}:&gfi;?s Full length 50c 79c Misses’ A Handful of MIDDY GEORGETTE CREPE BLOUSES WAISTS Wonders at the price] Slightly soiled by handling 59c $1.00 , Ladies’ Silk LADIES’ SWEATERS SILK SWEATERS Al colors at $5.95 $7.95 Ladies’ Silk LADIES’ SWEAtTERS SILK SWEATERS al at L $9.50 $12.50 kirTe™ | SKIRTS! SKIRTS! $6.75 All-wool Prunella Skirts Alteratio.m Free! $4.95 Pure I‘Saiflief;eraey MILLINERY! BLOOMERS Sailors $3.49 $1.49 Graduation P DRESSES |PAUL JONES MIDDIES Are Here!— re: Here—. Ccme and See Them All at Popular Prices, FUR Dotted SWISS DRESSES CHOKERS for Ladies— t JOHNSON’S SILK SCARFS for Are Here— HOSIERY We have a lot of them at Ai Ail Times! Popular Prices! It Pays To SHOP AT JOHNSON’S JUST RECEIVED A NEW SHIPMENT! SUGGESTIONS | bama. THE ' o Twentieth Century LIMITED He: Ought to Know A fellow: who claims he is in a position to know says that some people go to church more to save thvi]r faces rather than to save their souls. —Aint It A Fact?— Did You Ever See One? This same fellow says that a woman who_gets ready in a minute is worth waiting a life-time for. She would be alright, if there was. —But Is There?— The Mighty If If the sea dried up there would be left five million square miles of salt, one mile thick. It is suggested that this assertion be taken with a grain of salt. —To Make One Less— Would Lack Material To prove his skill with a razor, a London barber had himself blind- ifolded, and shaved two men in two minutes, ten and two-fifth seconds. ' Barnum was certainly right, when he said there’s a fool born every minute. London has at least two. —Possibly Three— It Will Catch Up With You The Wakikuyu tribe of East Af- rica believes that death is “catch- ing” and therefore that no one should touch a dead person. If one of the tribe is about to die, he is carried out of the village by his relatives and is left to die in the open. Ths idea is said to have originated in about the same manner as the superstition held by some people that 13 is an unlucky number. Just to prove that 13 is an unlucky numbes, a friend of ours recently said, look at the people who were born in the thirteenth century. They’re all dead now. —The Unlucky Stiffs— But There Are Odor Ways A reader of the column wants to know how to tell a bad egg. Per- sdnally we have never had much cxperience with bad eggs, but we understand that a good way to tell a bad egg is to break it gently. Pro- viding, of course, that you have any- thing to tell it. —Can You Beat It? KRAMER JOINS FORCES OF VOLSTEAD FOR RE-ELECTION St. Paul, May 9—John F. Cramer, | former federal prohibition director for the district, joined the forces of Andrew J. Volstead todaly in the latter’s candidacy for renomination to congress. Kramer will campaign the Volstead district in an effort to secure Volstead’s renomination for re-election. A Word to the Wise “In March I was called to the bed- side of my sister in Brewton, Ala- She was given up to die and was almost dead. Talked in a whis- per. Doctors said nothing but an operation would save her and she was too weak for that. Her color was yellow as a pumpkin and she was filled* with gas. That day I heard of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and went and got a bottle for her. In three weeks she was able to be about and walked a mile to church. +T am praising your medicine to every- » one.” 1t is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes prac- tically all stomach, liver and intesti nal ailments, including appendicitis, One dose will convince or,money re- funded.” At All Druggists.—Adv. ————— MK i % ! HAS NOTHING ADDED i OR TAKEN AWAY i | i Have it delivered to your door every morning! from healthy cows— handled in a sanitary way. PHONE 16-F-4 ALFALFA DAIRY W. G. SCHROEDER Fred Webster, Mgr. i | | g MILK and CREAM | § E | P T S E PR SISO S GODUE S QORI S s S SRR 077" THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER COMPARISON OF WAGES ~“'FOR LOCfl TEACHERS A comparison of the salaries for the present year, which is how prac- tically completed, and the salaries offered for the coming year, is cov- ered.in the following report prepared by the teachers’ committee. These figures cover the offers made 52 regu- lar instructors. Two substitute teach- ers are not covered in this list. Salary Salary Decrease, Increase 1921-22 1922-23 ¢ 3600 3900 ; 300, , 2475 2500 ! 25 2100 1890 210 2800 2525 275 1 1660 1440 220 1660 1440 220 : 1750 1800 50 11500 1500 ¢ RN 11500, 1440 0, - 11600 1350 250 1600 1350 250 : 1500. 1350 150 1500 1350 150 2250 2137% 112% 1450 1350 100 1400. . 1350 50 1400 1260 140 1400 1260 140 1350 1260 90 1300 1260 40 1350 1170 180 1250 1260 10 1250 1260 10 1400 1400 1500 1260 240 1125 1035 90 1200 1125 75 1200 1170 30 1250 1170 80 1150 1125 25 1200 1125 75 1250 1170 80 1200 1125 75 1500 1501 1 1250 1170 80 1250 1170 80 1250 1170 80 1250 1170 80 1250 1170 80 1300. 1170 130 1250 1125 125 1200, 1170 30 1200 1125 75 1200 1125 75 1300 1080 220 1200 1170 30 1200 1080 120 1100 1125 ] 25 1250 1170 80 1200 1125 75 1200 1125 75 1300 1170 130 DECLARES PUBLIC SAVES ON MOST: IMPORTANT NEEDS AND WASTES 'ON ‘NON.ESSENTIALS (Continuea from PaZe One.) idleness. or the involuntary victims of a depressed condition. It is not surprising under—-these circumstan- ces that programs of rigid retrench- ment should have been inaugurat- ed by manufacturers whose margins of profit had vanished before the spectres of approaching deficits. But it is as strange as it is regret- able that under, spch :circumstances ‘men_will invariably_ start their eco- TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 9, 1922 nomics at the most vital points and will cling t)} non-essentialsj -which they must ultimately rely for their relief. | “Consider for a moment the fact that while every street and highway throughout the land are crowded -with automobiles that are burning expensive gasoline in the presence of self-imposed idleness; while high priced hotels, theaters, ball parks and other camping grounds of amusement and non-production are enlarg\.gl their capucities to ac- commodate- the ever-increasing army of refugees. from; the storms.of life; while golf clubs, cigar factories, jewelry;, qestablishments, | . walking riums, ' pet dog kennels, | “dispénsaries and ‘boot flourishing ., as. and canary’' bir legging. joints,, are v never before in_our history; {i| while ‘the ecoasts''6f Florida"and Calk ifornia, the Maine woods and the hunting and fishing preserves of the ! North, South, East and West are teeming with multitudes of the '|'weary—the, constructive forces of - society with marvelously increased demands upon them are at this mo- ment suffering for the lack of ade- quate nourishment. “But we have in America all of the materials and brains necessary to the restoration of a wholesome |~ condition throughout the country and a large amount to spare to other more unfortunate peoples. And in spite of the innumerable obstacles ahead of us at the beginning of our march toward stable conditions and of the many yet unsurmounted, I am one of those who believe that we have made all the progress that we could have reasonably expected » make in so short a time after the world cataclysm and that we shall continue with probably occas- jonal halts to the heights of a na- tional and world greatness not hith- erto known.” STATE SUPREME COURT HAS EXCEPTIONAL CASE (By United Press) St. Paul, May 9—The state su- preme count today was asked to de- cide whether a receiver has an equity in collateral securities' held by a 'bank for a debt, The case invol- ved points of law which have never been decided by any court, and the Lonly similar case was decided in the laffirmative by the California court in _1859. +J. F. Merrill, as receiver, is seek- ing to recover $7,000 from W. F. Zimmerman of Red Wing. He seeks to have certain securities held by the Goodhue Natonal bank of Red Wing released to satisfy a judgement. SIX DENTAL CLINICS TO BE HELD AT FARGO CONVENTION (By United Press) Tareo. May 9—Six clinics will be held here in connfection with the wiree days’ state dental convention .opening today. Five of these will be clinic com- mittees and one by the Fargo Study ‘ctlub under the direction of Dr. Coop- er of Abercrombie. Sy (T Did you . remember your mothers’ birthday? GRAND THEATRE =i word ‘‘penny’’? the little copper 3; R AT OLD NEST East, West, Home’s Best THISIS " WEEK LIFE INSURANCE Let us take an cxample: A man earns $1,500 a year. After feeding, housing and educating his family, he finds he can save $125 a year. If he can live for twenty years, he can save $2,500 and accumulated interest. If he dies next year, his estate for wife and children is $125. The wife then must live in want, and the children, perhaps, go uneducated. This $125 per year will buy this man $3,000 of life insurance* If he dies next year, the family has $3,000, instead of $125. If he lives twenty years he has a policy worth somewhat less than $2,600.. He naid a moderate amount for protection. :,... +The only asset.of the average young man at the time of mar- riage is his life. If he can keep it long enough to' convert his energies into cash, he can educate his family and lay by some- _thing for “the rainy day.” If he loses that life prematurely, the sole asset of the family is gone, and penury and lack of opportu- nity is the fate of his'dependents. No man can afford to carry this risk. Good sense says that he' should contribute annually, a reasonable amount from his earnings to a fund, out of which the dependents of those un- fortunate enough to die, will receive benefits. . Such is the course of the prudent man. Let someone who will be protected by the law of averages take the chances. Don’t ask your wife or babies to take it. “JUST ASK GUSTAFSON” District Agent NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. No. 14 Battles Block AR IllllllIIIIIIIIIIIII|lIllIIIII;ll!Im|IL RGN X BEFORE THE DRIVE in your auto, apply our cold cream to your face and hands and you will not be troubled by wind, cold or sun, by rain or snow. Our cold cream is a remarkable protector and beautified of the skin. Keep it on your toilet table. City Drug Store LALIBERTE & ERICKSON Phone 52 - Bemlid)i a_"|||||mm|||uunumumuimm[ Sz | IS 95¢ SPECIAL 95¢ While They Last "PUMPS TIRE C TIRE PUMP895 PUMPS A BIG VULUE ‘G.> w. Jewett Co., Inc. fiuumnlmmumu||u|||||m| Fordsor | = = S Do you just look, o fellow citizens, ° or do you really see? Most of us think we LOOK and SEE, but if we watch ourselves we will find that we are a most unobserving lot of mortals! We have been LOOKING at freight locomotivesall our lives, and at passenger enginesf too! Can you tell how many wheels each type has? Probably not; it is not likely that one person in a thousand can. We LOOK but we do not SEE! " The same holds true regarding numberless other things, including words! Suppose you should LOOK at the word ‘‘Penney’’—would you SEE that it had in it one more ‘“‘e’’ than the And if that word “Penney” should have:itwo little characters in front of it, like this, ¢J. C.”—a period after each ome—would you LOOK at them and really SEE them? Would you know that they are initials and that the word ‘‘Penney,’“which follows, combined with them, is the name of the founder of the World’s greatest chain-department store organization? If so, when you see a large Sign over one of the doors of your business blocks, reading “J. C: Penney Company,” you will know that a link of this' Nation-wide institution of service is lo- cated in your town, and that the word ““Penney’’ is 2ot “‘penny’’ and has no reference whatever to) piece. | Read The Pioneer Want Ads

Other pages from this issue: