Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 23, 1922, Page 6

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THE BEMIQJI DAILY: PIONEEK . it nt.mn.u DAILY PIONEER MiDy1 PIONEER PUBLISHING COMPANY G, K. CARSON, President E. H. DENU, Seey-ias, g 7.D. WINTER, News Editos ; TELEPHONE 922-923 1—: ek =] sk, ‘RATIONKYL. BbiTORIAL Agsocn-rm- — T o s e r%sm DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE THE NEW CRIME BODY ' Beniidji is peruonafly x’epresented on the state cnme cominission appointed by Governor J.*A. O. Preus by Judge C. W..Stanton of .this. city.. -Chief Justice Calvin' L. B'rown,j who heads the commis sion is the father of Montreville J. Brown, Bemidj attorney now serving as assistant attorney general. It is the purpdse of the commission, composed of 35 members from all parts of the state, to suggest reforms to the mext legislature in, the hope that crime may be reduced. Some' speclfie points as indicated by (;ove or Pretis dre: Improved ‘method of bringing criminals ‘promm"} Mo trial ’ More effective methods of ap- ,-attention W 5‘»‘- name mus 8,-C.-Thels Co. cnuuo. 1; and New York, N. Y. _anonymous wn to m;' editor, contri] used. ‘WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelva Thursday and sent postage advance, $2.00. 0 o iy Y m‘éhendmg criminals. Further policing of the state so that the ease ~with- whieh-criminals can commit depredations in farming communities and country towns and es- .. cape in autoniobiles may be ended. Determine the adwsabi]xty of having avcentral bureau for records of criminals. Discuss the idea of imposing a severer penalty when an automobile is used in the commission of a crime, the same as is ‘done when firearms are Draft specific recommendation for the abolition of the straw bondsman. ST Y Consider recommendation of a law abolishing fi»'&# you begin to yell for help side of China. bacon and waffles. laden spnng mcrnmgs of better. health. steps never grow less, s en’s vote solid. Varlous States by Bureau of Public Roads. (Pidpared by the Unjted States Department t Agriculture.) A steady nnpply of surplus war ma- terjal suitable for highway construc- tion 18 being distributed to the states by; the bureau of publi¢ roads, United States Department of Agriculture, which acts as & clearing house. A force -of about 275 persons {s kept In the fleld takjng fnventories and pre- p-rlnz material. for shipment. _Ldsts of material avallable are sent to.each state highway department, and a period of 80 days allowed for flxe submission of requisitions. The mate- rigl Is allotted to the state on the same basis as monetary federal ald for- rodd ‘construction, a value being’ of_the total value received by stite. Up to h‘ebmary 1-of this yi ir the value of the ‘materlal 0&1}1 dls- tributed amounted to $126,000,000, of $00.000.000. revresented the Il 'n!ltled to {:fl lll. f Duinclflfll :’m flll)alchal creditea to it, orf oth.rwlh M.Iul. ngnl ows mmu i Samuel R. Van Sant, former governor of Min- nesota, got.up at daybreak a few mornings ago and walked from Minneapolis ‘to 'St. Paul in time to have breakfast at the home of his son. It was the former governot’s 78th anniversary of his birth and the hike was an annual affair with him. The distance covered was about 12 iniles. Twelve mxles lsn’t 50 far in an automoblle, but when you qturt in to wear it away on foot why— well, some of you lads half "the age of Governor Van Sant step out and see how far you get before If you are toting the average “bay window” of the average car-riding American, by the time you get to the Teachers college you will be puffing like a locomotive; Diamornd Point will lepgues away, and Birchmont seven miles the other Yet this 78-yeur-old sturdy Mihnesotan reels off a dnzen miles just to get his appetite up for some For our own go3d, the most of us do not walk enough, -There is no more healthful exercise; and none more pleasant—especially these perfume- It has been said that to walk ten miles a day will add ten years of life to the nversge person nnd what’s more, you will enjoy life better by reason Sure, the flivver will get you there quicker— there is no argument on t)mt—-hut that isn’t say- ing it is thg best way to get there after all. A little less automohilmg and a lxttle imore,.Van . Slntmg mlght be a change for the better. Congratulations to the governor—and may his That smile of A. P.’s ought to get him the wom- :cated at Schenectady, N. pliiced on each item and a record ke‘bt several states. being done. seem to be places, and the Bemldjl at once. ' ad - vafue of motor vehiclés a Recently an inventory Wwab taken of about $40,000,000 worth of imaterlal at Camp Grant, Rockford, I, part of which will be retained by the War de- partment and the remainder, sultible for foad work, soon will be avallable for_ distribution. Thé work is belng rushed, so that the materiul may be used for road work early in the sea- 50n_and the camp cleaned up by Au- gus! 1, Other surplus war materlals. recent- 1y recelved for distribution and the carrying of firearms. Just to show tha . sluke, be: it known, community which invited, Twin City newspaper rep- tesentatives to attend: the blowont. more, two of them responded. C. B. Winter of the Minneapolis Journal and J. W. Luddon of the St. Paul Dispatch and Pioneer Préss were on the job. strated that they were past maste blowing stumps ang entertaniing visitors. town, Mass., and Dover, N, 200 carloads of brick. abo ' A Federal-Ald oan rete Road in_ Min. whick 1o illhlb tor By, gaving nnooomo}poma- of ulls. 1,000,000 ‘pounds staples,- 1,000,000 square teet of concrete reinforcing mesh, *200, renches and 183 car- loid‘s of p;z ‘! d plek handiés. Bagdger Girls Resolve. Pledged to accomplish at least: one act of social service each semester, thirteen woman students of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin have organized a woman's soclology club, to be called the Alpha Pi lon. The impetus for the creation of such.a club—which fs encouraged by the faculty of the sociology department—came from a group of sealor women speclalizing In socioloas _ -poor, pnthetlc pal Flife?” .women, a lm]e girl of This has been done in No reference is made in regard to the proposi- tion of a return to the infliction of capital pumsh— ment, but doubtless this will be gone over by the . commission, and should_ it make a recommendation it, no doubt, will bave great weight wxeh the legis- lature, whatever if may be. The governor is “to be conpatnlated on his activ- ity aléng this Tine: It is high time something was | Sarm— 1 are ““Live Ones” at Ten- at, thus far thxs is_the only And what's It just seems to come natural for Beltrami coun- ty men to do things a bit better than in ‘most strike “denion- at ‘the art of community of T One section of the greatest juvenfle band in the United States—which, by the way, is the Bermd)x Juvenile Band—furnished llvely mnsxc “Land Clearing Btowout" at Tenstnke Monday r the . Dealers say the hevi-fangléd chocolate-coated ice cream confections are the greatest séllers ever in- vented. *‘Cone” is be .possible? 8 — Cutting the brush, blowing the stumps, plowmg, discing and seedmg the land, all in one day, was a great stroke of business. #resdent Harding says he Kas yet to find the ideal golf course. The president should come to — “Hpover succeeded in getting the coal operators to' 'olemnly promise fiot to raise thé price of coal until they raise the price of coal. [ S————————— HUD AS A DEFECT A West a &ducator at | the Natfonal Editatton ssocla- i tion conference wiis asked what he regarded a the greatest de- l fect in Anierfcan educdtfon, and l he sald in his district it was | | miid. ~Bad roads ‘cdn be the greatest déefect in any communl- ty. They cin be the greatest de- fect in educatlon, when they do not permit the regular attend- nuce of children in school. They USSP ————, | kind of S vlty, whep they pn- “vent {:& famunication needed. whetl\t!r 1€.1s a bnd street car “system, a bad st d ora vmud road in the country. T — 16 SUFFER FROW BOREOON Woman Novelist Sees Little to !nvy In"Those In Posssssion of Great Worldly Wealth, “You hn\e to e poor to enjo; the flavor- of lfe,” sdyh }fidfle& Nortls ity Ex‘bkfixflhi Why the engaging hero- |- Ine in “The Beloved Woman" turnud down a milllonafre alinost'ambassador cold for a ‘podr Wultér &nd Why Ste- phen Winishlp In “Lucretia. Lombard” did not welgh wealth and an assnred position against w-gréat lovh “Poor Qeqfla are never bored with life. I had lunch taau," e contln- iled, ‘n & re!tl\tnnt ‘fifed with rich women. {Hogestly, hm think the explosion ot a Somb -0om would ave stirged theii - they Were so red. ANd I th 1f, ‘You m&fi u{tln‘ your “your gold 0. for a single )o!‘-nmu out of “It was the davgl 'grie of these % ht?'g n, whose ‘mother found that she and a boy friend of ningtgen hiad Jilred a flat to- gether, in whlch—lnnocent]y enough, I helleve—the two were ‘entertaining their yodig friends ‘after the thénter. ‘And when the mother asked the girl, “You have everything—why on earth did you do siich a thing as this? the sixteen-year-old answered, wearlly, ‘I Vns 80 bérea, mothery " ‘Wwhite-gloved” hih mesh bags to pay Junch., What are ATTRACTIVE ROOM FOR BOY Yourgstér Will Appreciate Surround- -inge That-Are.Comfortable and of Good Appoannu. B A boy's room needs to be ‘practical, Indestructible, convenient and boylish, says_the Designer. The room should be beautiful, but it should be founded on masculinity from the start; there should be no thin curtains, frills, or any of the fragile colors; everything must be simple of line, plain and un- obtrusive; things must be arranged So that every article may be kept'in its place easlly;.the furniture, wall paper, “rugs, must 'be désigned for wear. But surely, you say, these un- interesting requirenients cannot pos- sibly result in the exciting spot that I8 'supposed to mold a boy's charac- ter and fire his fmagination. Put nothing in the room that is not necessary;- the bed, the desk, the | table, three comfortable chairs, the shelves for books, the chiffonier. Of course you have some brasswork, a pnrchmentihnded lamp, Some plain but good-looking wall lights, a few pil- lows covered 'in old yellow, blue and gray. You may furnish it very inexpen- sively, or .you ay choose furniture quite worth’ while enough to warrant its m‘esence in’your son's own grown- up house some day. 1f your boy is quite ‘'young, you may wish a “more childish ‘room than ‘if he were fully half-grown. The Walls of any boy’s room may be papered in tan, or water-tinted In pale ‘cream or gray (an economical finish that may be changed from year to year with little labor); any, boy's mother can dye some unbleached heavy muslin_a“Wonderful ‘henna for ‘b“e afforded, B can. A henn 159 from the Same dye pot that -prodliccd the curtains, 4nd a ‘few copper’ orna- ments are chéap ‘to buy, easy to keep brilliant, ‘but ohl 50 decoratively ef- fective! HOUSES NOW SHOT FROM GUR Concrete Constrig Surety May Be Said to Have Reachied the Limit in This'ldea. “Shooting” houses out of a “gun” Is the latest wrinkle in concrete con- struction, Writeg~Cleveland Gainés in Popnlnr Mechnnlcs Magazine, , The gun conslsts of & nozzle-like affair at the enid of a 3:inch hose. Dry, concrete is put into a optaler and _water forced through it, . The ‘mixtire I8 thus made at the last moment before it is applied. 3 In buflding thé"Arst of the houses In thls fashion a_one-sided frametwork of ‘tar paper d chicken ‘wire. was grected. Iron’ inforcing rods were pl‘ ed against this and the concrete agdlnst Jt with the use of a gun. A wall two lnfihés ck was “Shot” in thls wsy. ‘allgy dry, and the tar paper and chi cken wire peeled off. The result was 4 ‘solid concrete wall. Doprs, windowsjand. plumbing were nut in place and'the wnll shot around them. In similar blahlgm ceilings, floor, a fenice around the yard and other ‘parts of the house and yard were shot. Seats were shot Into the wall at one YPlace, decorative designs in another, and. so on. The: resulting house and yird was a complete home in one ‘plece—a monolith. The second house bullt with the gun employed wallboard- in ‘place of tar paper and chicken ‘wire, with even bet- “JOB.OPEN” WIRES BANK TO D. B. C. A banker and a lawyer recently wired Dakota Business College, Fiargo, N." D, for help. Result: Ed Gratf is 20w with Adains Co. Saate’Bank of Hettiniger, Rosella Gregzrson is with Atty. Fleming of Scranton. Out-of-town banks by hundreds, pre r-D. B. C. assist- anits. They’ e trained to get aliead. They do. 230 are bark officers. ‘Dakota Business Colkge is the only gchool beginning-its year in junc This means more individual mstruchon Your’re_ready sooner to, **Follow the Succeggful.”” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. “ROADS ARE HELPFUC Farmers of Massac County, lllinols, Are ‘Not Bothered Much by BEMID) FLORAL G0 -..Muddy.-Weather.. . .. fia CHQ‘G‘ o Muddy weather doesn't bothier the CUT FLOWERS 5“'3 farmers in Massac county, lilinols, ’ ‘PLANTS bl L ippading Sl v Fihe e end in Massnc county is not very great be- cause the gravel is taken vight out,of, the hills algng the. Ohio river. Some’ mine .waste s used for road-making, In either case the farmers have a good H Belmdjl, Mm. ‘$12 Beltrami Ave, Phone 418-W voad to market. Eflectrlc .nght er and heat. g;lle:’ted to send us the followmg questionnaire properly e posit eq made by each corisumer who is not a property owner. This Hepont mll be retirned by the Conipany at the time service is duconhllued pl‘ovfileil all bflls due the company are paid in full. _Phone 26-J for Lavinia! We are ready to start bmldlng an Electrlc Light Line to LAVINIA at once. Before. we can compl:te the work, we must have !he f‘ollnwmg information. Approxmnte number of consimers for lights, pow- Lavinia ‘cottage owners aré urgently re- " THE FOLLOWING ¥A ES WILL BE EFFEC i Class “E”. Consumer&——l.lghtmg First 25 K.W.H. 15c per k.w.h. Next . 75 K.W. 14c per k.w.h. Next 200 K:W:H. 10c. per. k.w.h. All in excess . . ‘8c per k.w.h. Monthly minimum of $3. 00 psr month net.. A de- 1 to two months mlnmmm charge shall be A discount of five per cent of the above rates will be made on bills paid before the .10th of the month following the use of the current. nished by the Company. Meters will be fur- 1 Power Rate e as_the rate recently proposed by Class “Br_ To be the 3 our Chicago office for the city of B‘e’lmd)l. Class “C”—Cooking and Heahng Rate 4Y2c per KWH net, with a minimum chrge of h. No ducount. The ylid'e'rfiglie’d will requiire the following: E]eqiric Service: About.......o.ooocooovoeerro i Minnesota Electric Light and Power Compan E.E. SWA.NS%N MaYager Bennt::l!l, Minn. MANDARIN GAFE 302 Second Street Open Under New Manageitient - 'Open from 9 to 2 O'Clock A. M. Chop Suey Dininer Served All Amencan or Chinese Dishes’ Semd in First Class Style, CHARLIE LUM, Prop. @ Buy at Factory Prices—From Factory Direct to You BLEKRE TIRES and TUBES ~Unlimited Mileage Guarantee mpnq Tube Prices That Defy 3z Cord All Comp: ze Non-Skid Extra Heavy Standard . 30x3 ) $1.45 1.15 ' 30x31% 2o $1.65 $1.25 32x315 $19.90 = $2.10 $1.35 T 31x4 $13.! 95 $22.85 | $2.45 $1.85 32x4 $16.35 $2395 $2.60 $1.90 33x4 1$16.95 $24.70 $2.70 $1.95 34x4 $17.55 $25.45 $2.80 $2.00. 84!4 K $25.45 $33.15 $3.50 $2.45 30x3 “Bleco” N.-S...$7.35 30x31; “Bleco” N.-S... $7.95 BUY NOW!—WHY PAY MORE? Mail Orders Solicited * O. H. OLMSTEAD Factory Representative .. . 208 Second Street Bemidji, Minn. JOHNSTON'S. TOP SHOP TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 23,1922 » STOVES, RANGES,'BEDS, ete.| Mcl}lemon&Son’ e ———— ——— Bicycles | Phone 897 e 10th and Irvine Ave. Jake's Repair Shop. WE Bu? AND, §ELL New and Sécond:Hand FURNITURE —Phone 300— Minnesota Ave. e o —————— o Have it delivered to your handled in a sanitary way. We will iel'um your washing in excellent condition, just as you would want it done. Try sending your wash- ing out this summer. Family Washings 10: 1b—80¢ minkiaum Bem. Steam Laundry --lem 195— S o eg——— CLARIFIED- MILK HAS NOTHING.ADDED OR TAKEN AWAY door every morning! ' MILK and CREAM from healthy cows— PHONE 16-F-4 ALFALFA DAIHY W: G, SCHROEDER SWEET" bn’nflas At dinner and after. wards ‘as the-shades} of night .are. heing ‘L4 pulléd * down on*the §; slumber :of ;the little (| ones a glass of milk * is just the thing— :% Koors: Pasteurized Milk. RSBROTHERS AN O~ ..DAIRYPRODIKTS B3

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